. Hardware merchandising 1895 . ust 1 July 1 June 1. May 1 April 1 March 1 February 1 January 1 December 1, 1893 . November 1 October 1 September 1 August 1July 1 ... June 1 May 1 . April 1 March Furnacesin 200185172171171173179182 181172171i351078812714433125130130117114•25169220 244251 255255 Capacity Per Week. Gross tons. 201,414 194,029 180,525 I7,i94 157,224 •58,132 156,979 163,391 168,414 168,762 162,666 151,13s 151,113 85,950 62,517 110,210 126,732 110,166 99,242 99,087 80,070 73,895 107,042 174,029 181,551 178,858 176,978 The sta
. Hardware merchandising 1895 . ust 1 July 1 June 1. May 1 April 1 March 1 February 1 January 1 December 1, 1893 . November 1 October 1 September 1 August 1July 1 ... June 1 May 1 . April 1 March Furnacesin 200185172171171173179182 181172171i351078812714433125130130117114•25169220 244251 255255 Capacity Per Week. Gross tons. 201,414 194,029 180,525 I7,i94 157,224 •58,132 156,979 163,391 168,414 168,762 162,666 151,13s 151,113 85,950 62,517 110,210 126,732 110,166 99,242 99,087 80,070 73,895 107,042 174,029 181,551 178,858 176,978 The status of the coke and anthracite fur-naces and charcoal was as follows on Oct. i: Coke & Anthracite. —Charcoal— No. in Frncs in Ca- blast. Capacity, blast, pacity. Oct. 1, 1895 206 196,816 23 4,598 Sept 1 194 189,653 21 4,376 Aug. 1 179 176,380 21 4,145 July: 168 167,315 17 3,879 June j 154 153,195 18 May j 153 152,172 18 4,382 April 1 152 154,060 19 4,012 March 1 154 153,027 19 3,952 Feb. 1 160 158,375 19 ECONOMY Furnaces and Combina-tion Heaters They are called Economy because they supply themaximum of heat from the minimum of fuel. That isthe first point one considers when choosing a , too, they are very heavy and durable and simplein construction. These are the points that have builtup their reputation as the best line of heaters in the market. Send for catalogue. Economy Warm Air Furnace J. F. Pease Furnace Co. HEATING ENGINEERS 189-193 Queen St. East, TORONTO HARDWARE AND METAL 23 A LEAD AND ZINC METROPOLIS. The city of Joplin, Mo., has the distinc-tion of being the centre of a district thatproduces four-fifths of all the lead and zincin the United States. The history ofJoplin, says The St. Louis Republic, issimply the history of the mines. In lessthan three decades it has grown from acamp of pioneer prospectors to a busy andthriving metropolis of 14,000 indicating its industrial activity it is esti-mated that about $75,000 is
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