USA > Ohio > Hamilton County > Cincinnati > Sketches and statistics of Cincinnati in 1851 > Part 23
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In 1847, the manufacture of transparent oil painted window shades, was commenced by Sawyer & Co. The firm has made such improvements, in quality and style of shade, as greatly to re- duce the price, and their operations are constantly on the increase. Sawyer & Co. employ fifteen hands, on a product of twenty thousand dollars ; raw material, 40 per cent.
Wine .- This is a new and very important business, of which the great feature will be found under the appropriate section, " Culture of the Grape." In the various stages of wine growing and making, not less than five hundred persons are employed ; value of product, one hundred and fifty thousand dollars ; raw material, 25 per cent.
In addition to wine manufacturers who produce a common article merely, there are eight or ten individuals whose brands have already become known abroad, or who are preparing for the pro- duction of superior wines, principally from the Catawba grape. Of these, Longworth is the oldest and best known. But there are others who also make fine wines. Among these are R. Buchanan, Corneau & Son, T. H. Yeatman and G. & P. Bogen, whose wines are already in market, and find purchasers at remunerating prices, as fast as they can be made ready for sale.
Nicholas Longworth has been engaged in the cultivation of the grape thirty years, but has not given it that degree of attention
254
MANUFACTURES AND INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS.
necessary for full success until within a few years past. In a note to the writer of these pages, he says: "I have about one hundred and fifteen acres in grapes. I am now raising, and shall, in future, raise new seedlings extensively, both for wine and for the table, from our best native grapes, and may cross them with foreign grapes. I have within the past few years, grafted more than one hundred and twenty kinds of native grapes, obtained east, west, north, and south, and generally have them to bear the first year. I obtain them by express, and by mail, and private conveyance. We cultivate almost exclusively, the Catawba; we should exten- sively cultivate the Herbemont and Missouri. The former is our most vigorous grower, is a fine table grape, and makes a heavy wine, resembling, and equal to the Mansinælla. The Missouri, a wine resembling Madeira, and the fruit less subject to rot than other varieties.
Sparkling Catawba has hitherto been a losing business, as all ex- periments are. This was in part, owing to the small quantity made. The making of champagne wine is often a failure, except in very skillful hands, from want of effervescence. The breakage some- times is so great, in a single year, as to break up the establishment. This, the French writers tell us. In future, I hope to make up for past losses. The wine house and cellar I built some years since, was too small; the present establishment is forty-four feet by one hundred and thirty-five feet, four and a-half stories high ; bot- tom of cellar, twenty-five feet below the surface, double arches ; top, say twelve feet below ; basement wine cellar, half below the surface. I have not this season, for want of bottles, bottled as much as I in- tended ; quantity, say seventy-five thousand. I have this season aided Mr. C. Zimmermann with funds to buy up the best Catawba wine, to prepare to fill as dry wine. He is an experienced German wine merchant, and believes he can, from the Catawba, make a dry wine, superior to the best German and French. I have paid for wine enough to put up forty thousand bottles of dry wine, when of a proper age, and expect to increase the quantity yearly. Corneau & Son, are experienced French wine merchants, and will make supe- rior wines, and expect to do a large business. Much depends on the season, and neatness and care in gathering and pressing the grapes, and fermentation, for the quality of the wine, but equally as much on the skill exercised for the next two or three years. Pure wines require great attention and a cool cellar, or they will not keep.
255
MANUFACTURES AND INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS.
From the Isabella grape a fine ladies' wine may be made. There are but two methods of having good sweet wines. The one by drying the grapes before pressing, the other by adding the best loaf sugar or candy, before fermentation. Where drugs are put in to prevent fermentation the wine is not good. The French sparkling wines are made from a mixture of three varieties of grapes. French writers say the one is to give aroma and flavor, a second, to give strength, a third, to give effervescence. I should believe the reason for the mixture true, if all cost the same price, but that which gives the aroma and flavor, costs three times the price of the others."
Robert Buchanan being written to on the same subject, replies :
"You ask for my experience in grape culture and wine making. It is but small, and acquired only within the past six or seven years. I commenced my vineyard in 1844 by planting about an acre, adding one or two acres annually, until it has grown to six acres, where I intend it shall remain.
"Two hands are sufficient to attend and keep the vineyard in com- plete order-these cost twelve dollars per month, each, and their board. In the season of the vintage, additional hands have to be employed. The cost of gathering the grapes and making the wine, I estimate at about twenty-five to thirty dollars per acre, of attend- ing the vineyard and keeping it in order annually, sixty to seventy dollars per acre.
"In 1848 I made from one and a half acres then in bearing, five hundred gallons ; in 1849, from two and a half acres, nine hundred gallons, and, in 1850, from three and a half acres, one thousand, six hundred and thirty-eight gallons. I have found a ready sale for my wine at one dollar and twenty-five cents per gallon, when prepared for market; say, from one to two years after each vintage. "My wine cellar is ten feet deep. The wine press is in a cellar adjoining, seven feet deep. The grape vines are planted three by six feet apart in the vineyard. A vineyard, with the proper atten- tion and in a favorable position, should yield an average product of three hundred to four hundred gallons per acre, for a succession of years. Very good years five hundred gallons, and seasons subject to the rot, one hundred to two hundred gallons.
"A bushel of grapes in bunches, will yield three to three and a half gallons of must or juice.
"The loss, by evaporation, lees, etc., in fermenting wines, is about 10 per cent.
1
256
MANUFACTURES AND INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS.
"The greatest care should be taken to select for pressing, only the sound and ripe grapes, and cleanliness is as absolutely necessary in making wine, as in making butter. When the grapes are sound and well ripened, no sugar or brandy should be added, these additions are only used in making inferior wines."
Corneau & Son, manufacturers and dealers Catawba and other varieties of American wine, 82 West Fourth street, near Vine. Vineyard and wine presses, four miles beyond Covington ; employ five hands in the manufacture of the wine. In 1849, their first vin- tage, put up three thousand ; in 1850, ten thousand bottles Catawba wine. They are preparing to make sparkling Catawba from their next crop, if the season be favorable.
Their vineyard comprehends seven and a-half acres, and contains twenty thousand vines ; and they plant additionally every year.
Messrs. Corneau estimate the wine product, as at an average of four hundred gallons to the acre for a series of five years, which must date after the vines commence bearing.
G. & P. Bogen have fifteen acres in grapes, near Carthage, of which ten acres are in bearing condition. They have ten acres elsewhere, in smaller patches-two acres of which, are in the city. Will have the entire twenty-five acres bearing in the course of 1851 and 1852. They have made, in favorable seasons, as high as from five hundred to eight hundred gallons to the acre. Grapes for wine are worth three dollars per bushel, and wine, when newly made, if of good quality, one dollar twenty-five cents per gallon. Of course, it is a more profitable business to bottle it off when fit, as good Catawba commands six dollars per dozen bottles.
In 1848 made one thousand one hundred, in 1849, two thousand one hundred, and in 1850, three thousand three hundred gallons ; would have been more but for three hail-storms. In 1850, bought five thousand gallons additionally. Twenty thousand bottles con- stitute half their present stock; the other half is in casks. They make both still and sparkling Catawba.
One side of their wine cellar, which is sixty feet in length, is filled with casks of wine. Of these, fifteen hold each, from three hundred to four hundred ; two, five hundred ; two, seven hundred and fifty ; two, eight hundred and fifty, and two, one thousand and fifty gal- lons each.
No pains or expense has been spared, to make the cellar every- thing which a wine-cellar should be.
257
MANUFACTURES AND INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS.
Wire working. Five establishments, principally small .- Employ thirty hands on a product of sixty-nine thousand dollars; raw ma- terial, 50 per cent.
Wm. Bromwell, wove and worked wire manufactory, Walnut street, three doors below Fifth street market space, makes every description of riddles and screens, for all kinds of grain, seeds, powder and sugar; strainer wires of all numbers, wire for spring- house and cellar windows, hair sieves and strainers of all sizes ; safes and sieves, rat and mouse-traps, riddle and screen wire. Employs sixteen hands, on a product of fifty thousand dollars.
Wool Carders. Four factories, principally small .- Thirteen hands ; labor value, ten thousand five hundred dollars.
Wrought Nails. Four shops .- Twelve hands ; value of product, nine thousand dollars; raw material, 50 per cent.
This chapter of " Cincinnati in 1851," may be appropriately closed, with the following remarks of Horace Greeley, published in the Tribune after his return, in 1850, from Cincinnati. It affords a brief summary, and just estimate of our advantages and prospects as a manufacturing city.
" It requires no keenness of observation to perceive that Cincin- nati is destined to become the focus and mart for the grandest circle of manufacturing thrift on this continent. Her delightful climate ; her unequaled and ever-increasing facilities for cheap and rapid commercial intercourse with all parts of the country and the world ; her enterprising and energetic population ; her own elastic and exult- ing youth ; are all elements which predict and insure her electric progress to giant greatness. I doubt if there is another spot on the earth where food, fuel, cotton, timber, iron, can all be concentrated so cheaply-that is, at so moderate a cost of human labor in produc- ing and bringing them together-as here. Such fatness of soil, such a wealth of mineral treasure-coal, iron, salt, and the finest clays for all purposes of use-and all cropping out from the steep, facile banks of placid, though not sluggish navigable rivers. How many Californias could equal, in permanent worth, this valley of the Ohio !"
258
SYNOPSIS OF MANUFACTURING AND INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS.
SYNOPSIS OF MANUFACTURING AND INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS.
1841.
1851.
Factories, Shops, Works, Mills, Yards, etc.
No. Hds.
Product. No.
Hds.
Product.
Agricultural machines.
$
1
30
$ 36000
Alcohol and spirits, wine distillers.
6
12
608260
Animal charcoal factory
1
12
25000
Apple butter makers.
3
9
5000
Architects. .
6
9
17000
10
15
22000
Artificial flower factories
3
8
12000
7
66
45000
Bagging factories.
1
87
78650
2
238
270000
Bakers ..
52
132
259000 140
445
637662
Band and hat box makers
1
5
9000
6
60
36000
Baskets, cradles, makers.
Q
5
2800
7
30
18000
Bell and brassfounders.
8
62
81000
12
132
209500
Bellows makers.
2
12
11000
3
16
24000
Blacksmith shops.
52
294
311400
82
223
235395
Blinds, venetian, shops ..
6
20
26172
5
18
21000
Block, spar, and pump makers.
8
90
106000
10
97
349000
Bonnet bleachers and pressers
15
102
100700
15
136
122000
Boot and shoemakers.
166
652
488000 374 1760 1182650
Breweries.
8
60
126000
21
172
566000
Brick yards. .
35
175
87500
60
367
207000
Bristle and curled hair dressers
2
42
16600
4
104
48800
Britannia ware factories.
1
8
12840
2
32
38690
Brush makers.
4
15
19000
15
90
60500
Burr mill-stone makers.
2
15
10500
4
19
24000
Butchers
62
157.1098015 121
600 2850000
Camphine and spirit gas makers
2
7
19000
3
7
17200
Candy and confectionary makers.
12
35
54000
12
80
128120
Caps-men's and boys', makers.
9
50
39000
Carpenters and builders.
160
645
418600 284 2320 2116000
Cars and omnibuses, railroad.
6
87
127000
24
212
247400
Carpet weavers.
7
37
46000
18|
65
56000
Carvers in wood.
3
7
7000
Castor oil factory
1
8
55000
Charcoal, pulverized.
3
9
18500
Chemical laboratories
3
29
68000
5
79
226000
Cistern builders.
4
12
21300
3
36
75000
Clothing factories
86
813 1223800 108
1
17
38000
Comb factory.
1 20
18550
1
18
18000
Composition roofers
4
18
40000
Coopers.
31
176
167000
63
796
387000
Copper, tin, and sheet-iron workers.
32
208
211300
42
240
258000
Copperplate printers.
5
8
21000
2
9
50000
Cordage and rope makers.
4
18
33600
9
130
180000
Curers of beef. tongues, etc.
13
40
135000
-
6
27
40000
Boiler yards.
10
33
22000
Book binderies ..
3
7
6800
6
16
13500
Brick masons and Plasterers.
108
466
208650 208
876
408650
Bucket and tub factory
1
90
84200
Blacking paste makers.
6
12600
3
8
18000
3
40
14200
Awning, tent, bag makers
2
6
3000
Cloak and visites makers
950 1947500
Coffee roasters.
4
110
108447
Carriage factories
Brand, stamp, and blind chisel makers.
SYNOPSIS OF MANUFACTURING AND INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS.
1841.
1851.
Factories, Shops, Works, Mills, Yards, etc.
No.
Hds.
Product.
No.
Hds.
Product.
Cutlery, surgical and dental instruments- tailors' shears makers.
8
13 $ 10700
4 32
110
80000
Dentists.
36
80
92000
Die sinkers.
3
5
5000
Domestic liquor factories
16
46
726000
Dyers and scourers
10
30
15540
15
24
28000
Edge tool makers.
8
37
41600
19
72
97900
Edge tool grinders
1
18
20000
Engravers. ..
8
11
23550
14
30
50000
Fancy job printers.
2
25
30000
Feed and flouring mills.
10
43
816700
14
65 1690000
Fire-engines, hydraulic apparatus builders.
2
13
13750
1
37
65000
Flooring mills
6
31
73000
14
72
351200
Florists
13
563
668657 15400
4
40
20000
Furniture factories.
59
335
664000 136 1158 1660000
Gas and coke works.
1
50
65000
Gas fitters.
2
24
45000
Gas burner cap factory
1
3
5000
Gilders .
10
36
39000
1
5
10000
2
30
40000
Glove factories
3
33
20000
Glue do.
5
40
28000
Gold leaf and dentists' foil makers.
1
5
11000
Do. pen factory .
1
3
3500
Grates, etc., factories.
2
52
45000
Ground spice and drug mills.
6
56
140000
Ground mustard
do.
2
10
15000
Gunsmiths
5
15
16842
6
30
35000
Hatters.
25
181
312000
40
367
445000
Hat block factories
1
4
4500
Horse shoers.
12
35
48000
Hose, belts, etc., factories
1
2
2109
4
26
96000
Hot air furnace builders
1
20
60000
Ice packers.
14
60
150000
Iron, rolling mills.
2
148
394000
5
550 1050000
Do. safe, chest, and vault factories
1
12
11400
3
56
96000
Do. railing
do.
5
77
96000
Japaned filter maker. Do.
1
2
2000
1
34
52000
Lever lock
do.
5
49
39000
10
60
53000
Lightning rod
do.
1
50
150000
Lithographers.
1
4
3500
4
24
20000
Looking-glass factories
6
17
26000
7
34
48000
Machinists.
4
42
77000
12
120
130000
Marble workers.
1
3
10000
5
164
190000
Masonic & Odd Fellows' regalia embroid'r's
4
18
21000
Math., astron., & optical instrument makers Mat maker.
3
16
30000
6
24
40000
Mattress makers and upholsterers
10
58
84800
10
80
95000
Milliners.
..
60
650
820000
Mineral water factories
8
64
165000
1
15
14000
2
4
3500
Do. marble dust
do.
15
35 120000
Founderies and engine shops
44 4695 3676500
Fringes, tassel, etc., makers.
1
7
950
25 $ 40000
Daguerreotypists.
1
1
1
3 7240
tin ware factory
1
4 6000
Glass works, cutters, etc.
259
260
SYNOPSIS OF MANUFACTURING AND INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS.
1841.
1851.
Factories, Shops, Works, Mills, Yards, etc.
No.
Hds.
Product.
No.
Hds.
Product.
Mineral teeth factory
$
1
5
$ 9000
Morocco leather yards.
7
18
25000
6
62
89500
Music publishers.
1
30
50000
Nut and washer maker
1
4
20000
Oil, castor factory ..
1
7
60000
Do. lard and stearine factory .
1
4
31000
34
124 3015900
Do. linseed, mills.
2
4
1
24
135000
Packing box and refrigerator factories
8
28
39000
12
65
120000
Painters and Glazers. .
41
148
78000
72
632
385000
Paper makers.
4
10
68000
14
90
660000
Pattern makers
2
3
3500
14
30
25500
Perfumers.
2
12
25000
Pickles, preserves, sauce makers.
34
95000
7
96
167000
Planing machine factory
1
12
30000
Platform scale makers
6
36
60000
Plow makers.
6
30
37900
6
24
45000
Plumbers
4
18
48000
16
135
195000
Potters.
2
11
12000
14
50
36000
Pork, beef, and ham curers factories.
1
4
2500
2
8
15000
Do. press factory
2
11
9000
1
30
52000
Publishers
1
12
36000
Roofers' patent.
22
102
23100
40
222
346500
Saddle tree makers.
1
5
4500
Sail Do.
4
15
9000
Saleratus factories
2
10
12000
Sausage
do.
15
21000
22
166
162000
Saw mills
6
31
73000
15
206
411000
Saw factories.
2
6
6700
Screw plate factories .
2
12
16500
Sheeting, yarn, and candle wick factories.
5
410
636000
Shirt and stock makers.
5
75
40000
15
250
I57000
Silver and gold workers.
8
36
56500
5
50
90000
Soap and candle factories.
17
122
322940
38
710 1475000
Spectacle makers.
1
4 36
70500
Stainers, glass
1
5
15000
Stair builders
3
18 24000
Starch factories
2
16
45000
5
42
98000
Steamboat builders
5
306
592500
7
554
488000
Stencil cutters.
3
60
46000
Stocking weavers
2
7
12000
4
21
13000
Stone cutters.
6
70
23000
22
249
222000
Stone masons.
44
218
101000
36
4281
308000
Straw hat and bonnet factories.
5
50
60000
3
381
263000
Do. vitriol laboratory.
9
120
330000
Patent medicine factories
8
45
120000
Plug, Bung, etc., factory.
1
8
12000
Printing ink factories
12
656 1246540
Saddlery, harness, and collar makers.
3
6
50000
Sand-paper factories.
1
10
92000
Sash, blind, and door
do.
22
90
71700
25
220
312000
Spoke factories.
2
3
8
5000
Stereotypers.
7
76
67000
Musical instrument makers.
36000
Plane, etc., makers.
4
33 2450 5760000
Sarsaparilla, cough candy factories.
9000
261
SYNOPSIS OF MANUFACTURING AND INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTS.
1841.
1851.
Factories, Shops, Works, Mills, Yards, etc.
No. Hds.
Product.
No. Hds.
Product.
Stucco workers.
2
6
$ 6000
2
14
$ 12000
Tailors ..
60
295
276000
98
816
832000
Tanners and curriers.
21
126
335000
30
380
965000
Tobacco, cigar, and snuff factories
26
358
225000
62 1310
931000
Trunks, carpet-bags, etc., makers
15
275
506000
Turners
12
27
28275
30
143
152000
Type founders
3
85
45400
2
121
100000
Undertakers.
14
56
76000
Varnish factories
2
9
135000
Venecr factories
2
20
66000
Vinegar do.
5
11
30500
26
59
168750 25000
Wagon makers.
21
96
104300
42
136
132000
Wall paper stainers.
43
34400
4
36
30000
Wash boards, zinc factories
3
40
85000
White lead
do
3
44
121750
4
123
385000
Wig makers.
3
8
6000
2
5
7500
Window shade factories.
4
81
73000
3
40
50000
Wine manufacturers
40
500
150000
Wire workers.
4
12
13000
5
30
69000
Wool carders
2
18
30000
4
13
10500
Wrought nail makers
4
12
9000
Whisky distilleries
3
37
145000
38
110
2857920
This synopsis affords an opportunity to compare the past and present.
The preceding table of manufactures and industrial pursuits classifies itself, as follows:
Raw Material.
Labor, etc.
Aggregate Product.
Per Cent. Raw Material.
Pr. Ct. Labor.
181100
3440900
3622000
5
95
57400
576600
574000
10
90
184800
739200
924000
20
80
816200
2893800
3710000
22
78
631000
1893000
2524000
25
75
484500
1130500
1615000
30
70
245000
455000
700000
33
67
1801600
2702400
4504000
40
60
681300
832700
1514000
45
55
168000
182000
350000
48
52
3155000
3155000
6310000
50
50
511500
418500
930000
55
45
3135600
2090400
5226000
60
40
2641600
1422400
4064000
65
35
562100
240900
803000
70
30
3957000
1319000
5276000
75
25
2876000
719000
3595000
80
20
7898610
877400
8776000
90
10
29988300
25028700
55017000
Wadding do.
1
11
22
262
COMMERCE.
XIV. COMMERCE.
OUR wholesale and retail dry goods, grocery, hardware, iron, crockery, glass, etc., trade, may be stated at thirty-six millions an- nually. One-fourth of this is a home consumption business. The following tables of imports and exports, illustrate this subject. It runs, as may be perceived, from 1845-46 to 1850-51, a period of six successive years. As the business year expires on August 31st, the column for 1850-51 comprehends a period of forty-one weeks only, being to the 18th June.
IMPORTS AT CINCINNATI,
For five years, commencing September 1st, and ending August 31st, each year.
ARTICLES.
'45-'46
'46-'47
'47-'48
'48-'49
'49-'50
'50-'51
Apples, green,. bbls.
17502
26992
28674
22109
6445
16778
Beef, .
2420
186
659
348
801
1098
Beef, ..
tierces
737
5
27
15
18
Bagging,
pieces
6805
5561
79228 165528
2094
324
Barley
90225
79394
11668
8757
3067
5565
29760
Butter,
bbls
3339
6345
6625
7721
3674
7237
Butter, ... firkins and kegs
6841
7090
6405
7999
7487
10099
Blooms,
tons
42770
2017
2203
9519
2545
2452
Bran, ete.,
.sks
3117
14594
1941
21995
49075
44257 697
Corn, ..
bushels
57245
896258
361315
344810 649227
443746
Corn meal,
928916
56775
29542
5504
3688
4920
Cider,
bbls
812
3261
2289
4346
453
1029
Cheese, .
. boxes
99059
120301
138800
143265 165940
166980
Cotton,
bales
4830
12528
13476
9058
8551
5702
Coffee,
.sks
55468
59337
80242
74961
67170
72719
Codfish,
drums
220
292
311
515
464
431
Cooperage,
pieces
105915
186186
179946
147352.201711 4504 2041
133497
Eggs, .... boxes and bbls
bbls'
202319
512506
151518
447844 231859
3432
1943
Fish, sund.
.sks .bbls
1461316
16836
19215
18145
14527
16689
Fruit, dried,
bushels'
2566
82871
27464
38317
11802
40144
Grease,
.bbls
426
482
58
878
1169
770
Glass,.
boxes
13088
18002
20281
33868
34945
33217
Glassware,. packages
11058
17121
15025
19209
25712
24562
Hemp,. . bundles and bales
9167
26678
15349
11161
12062
9592
Hides, .
loose
19781
24376
33745
23766
30280
22558
Hides, green,
lbs
5007
7513
10829
22774
14181|
24244
. boxes
241
207
133
414
718
74
Cheese, . .cks
808
483
164
281
97
6057 434359
Feathers,
3514
2767
4467
4908
Fish, ...... kegs and kits
996
2142
725
1059
1290
2413
Flour, .
2400
561
4035
87460 137925
108531
Beans,
10202
Candles,
263
COMMERCE.
ARTICLES.
'45-'46
46-'47
'47-'48
'48-'49
'49-'50
'50-'51
Hay,.
bales
8092
7049
8036
12751
14452
12269
Herring
boxes
2226
1603
4191
2960
3546
3482
Hogs,.
head
....
38774
49847
52176
60902
102391
Hops,.
bales
1064
645
238
799
687
Do.
do ... bundles
31820
33463
197120 34213
29889
55168
58168
Do.
do
tons
3581%
1685
827
1768
2019
1163
Lead,
pigs
25238
43675
39609
45544
49179
46736
Lard,.
bbls
138981%
21991
37978
28514
34173
36658
Do.,
kegs
51870
22722
41714
48187
63327
30961
Leather
bundles
1904
5069
6579
6975
9620
7832
Lemons
boxes
1904
2185
3068
4181
4183
2817
Lime,
bbls
9212
32016
63364
612781
56482
42507
Liquors, .
hhds and ps
122216
3369
3115
4476
5802
1465
Merch'ise and sund. pkgs Do.
.. tons
2815
794
7308
837
4540
2196
Molasses,
h. bbls
36510
27218
51001
52591
54003
63032
Malt,
bushels
8758
12562
7999
29910
41982
16034
Nails,
kegs
33207
54918
59983
55893
83073
67040
Oil,,
3706
5663
6618
7427
5049
5856
Oranges, .. boxes and bbls
2863
4137
5007
4317
6819
8702
Oakum
bales
551
1100
1486
1423
1799
1329
Oats,
bushels
106852
372127
194557
185723 191924
27870
194000
Pork and Bacon
hhds
4089
5476
4420
6178
7564
5878
Do.
do. tierees
98
124
140
465
2358
980
Do
do.
.bbls
53969
40581
69828
44267
43227
31210
Potatoes,
bbls
12707
15829
22439
17269
13898
19127
Pig Metal,
.tons
13685%
15868
21145
15612
17211
11482
Pimento and Pepper, bags
174I
3180
3455
1257
2558
1879
Rye ..
bushels
85821/2
41016 5004
11668
3298
12349
10727
Raisins, ..
boxes
12021
11990
22796
14927
11936
15388
Rope, Twine, etc.
4341
8002
7806
3950
3061
1923
Rice,
tierces
3140
1145
2494
3365
3556
4672
Sugar,
.hhds
13710
16649
27153
22685
26760
29917
Do.
.bbls
4956
7196
11175
7575
13005
14879
Do.
boxes
2184
5117
2928
1847
2467
2721
Seed, flax,.
.bbls
20494
25753
32260 4968
22859 5920
4432
3982
Do. hemp
400
290 56292
214 65265
510
314
49
Do.,
bbls
111005
124360
94722
76496 114107
61516
Shot,
. keg's
580
1118
809
818
1447
1239
Tea,.
packages
4255
5443
2931
7412
9802
5275
Tobacco
hhds
5078
6200
4051
3471
2213
2391
Do.
. bales
655
822
1229
1311
887
1571
Do.
. . boxes and kegs
6918
9241
14815
12463
17772
14855
Tallow,
. bbls
1734
1748
2472
1829
1225
3017
Wines,. . bbls and 34 casks
2621
4006
2252
2663
6874
3069
Do., .... baskets and bxs
1331
1419
2272
2101
4296
2080
Wheat, bushels
434486
590809
570813
385388 322699
360516
Wool,
bales
4471
2960
1943
1686
1277
788
Whisky,
.bbls
178336
184639
170436
165419 186678
199248
Yarn, cotton,
· packages
4367
9271
6403
5562
3494
4726
Do
. bales
165914
146541|
288095
262893 174885
88915
Do. grass
2759
4964
Salt,
.sks
13147
76985 110650
37817
Pork in bulk,
1b s
6037163
8027399 9643063 9249380 325756 14348204
133711
Oil .Cake, .
1647462
2225988 2811793 1767421
22233
23397
91681
Rosin, etc.,
.bbls
967868
263944
381537
68582 308523
169050
.
130965
188126
190059
Iron and Steel, pieces
187864 186832
15570
12693
2161
24336
264
COMMERCE.
EXPORTS AT CINCINNATI.
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