BRUSHES TABLE 2.-GENERAL STATISTICS IN DETAIL BY STATES: 1939-Continued ITEM 621 Value of products less cost of materials, supplies, containers, fuel, purchased electric energy, and contract work. See GENERAL EXPLANATIONS-Value added by manufacture. Colorado, 2 establishments; Connecticut, 7; Delaware, 2; Florida, 1; Georgia, 1; Iowa, 1; Kentucky, 1; Maine, 1; Minnesota, 2; Nebraska, 2; New Hampshire, 4; North Carolina, 1; Oregon, 2; Texas, 1; Virginia, 1; Washington, 4. TABLE 3.-VALUE OF PRODUCTS FOR THE UNITED STATES: 1939, 1937, AND 1929 1 Value of household, whisk, toy and hearth brooms; industrial and street-sweeping-machine brooms; fabricated plastic products; mops, emery boards, manicure sticks, etc. TABLE 4.-PRODUCTS, BY KIND AND VALUE, FOR THE UNITED STATES: 1939, 1937, AND 1929 Not called for separately on schedule. Included in value of "Brushes and parts not reported by kind” to avoid disclosing output of individual establishments. Includes $102,458, value of industrial brushes made as secondary products in other industries. Includes value of hair pencils to avoid disclosing data reported by individual establishments. Includes small amounts reported as values of "Toilet brushes, ornamented, mounted, or fitted with gold," etc., and of hair pencils to avoid disclosing data reported by individual establishments. TABLE 5.-WAGE EARNERS ENGAGED IN MANUFACTURING, BY MONTHS, FOR THE UNITED STATES, 1939, 1937, AND 1929, AND BY STATES: 1939 BEAUTY-SHOP AND BARBER-SHOP EQUIPMENT [A preliminary report for this industry was issued December 17, 1940] Description of the industry.--This industry embraces establishments primarily engaged in the manufacture of devices and equipment for use in beauty shops and barber shops. The classification does not cover the manufacture of furniture, nor certain other classes of equipment, such as sterilizers, that are also used by dentists and physicians and in hospitals. Hair driers, when made for use in beauty shops, are classified in this industry, but when made for use in the home are treated as products of the "Electrical appliances" industry in the Electrical Machinery report. As this industry was first classified as a separate industry for the census for 1935, there are no figures for earlier years. TABLE 1.-SUMMARY FOR THE UNITED STATES: 1935 TO 1939 Cost of materials, supplies, fuel, pur Value of chased elec- products manu the year)? Value added by facture 3 Horsepower of 2 See GENERAL EXPLANATIONS-Definition of establishment. prime movers CENSUS establishments! 1939 1937 1935 $ tric energy, and con See GENERAL EXPLANATIONS-Persons.engaged-general classification. 4 See GENERAL EXPLANATIONS-Wage earners and wages. Value of products less cost of materials, supplies, containers, fuel, purchased electric energy, and contract work. See GENERAL EXPLANATIONS-Value added by manufacture. TABLE 3.-VALUE OF PRODUCTS FOR THE UNITED STATES: 1939 AND 1937 TABLE 5.-WAGE EARNERS ENGAGED IN MANUFACTURING, BY MONTHS, FOR THE UNITED STATES, 1939 AND 1937, AND BY STATES, 1939 FURS, DRESSED AND DYED [A preliminary report for this industry was issued December 6, 1940] Description of the industry. This industry embraces | tanning, bleaching, and dyeing of pelts, and dressing of establishments primarily engaged in scraping, currying, hair and bristles. 2 See GENERAL EXPLANATIONS-Wage earners and wages. Figures for years prior to 1935 do not include cost of contract work. Value of products less cost of materials, supplies, fuel, purchased electric energy, and contract work. See GENERAL EXPLANATIONS-Value added by manufacture. 5 Not called for on schedule. Data not available. 1 Kentucky, 1 establishment; Massachusetts, 2; Michigan, 2; Minnesota, 1; Missouri, 2; Washington, 2; Wisconsin, 1. 2 See GENERAL EXPLANATIONS-Definition of establishment. 3 See GENERAL EXPLANATIONS-Persons engaged-general classification. 4 See GENERAL EXPLANATIONS-Wage earners and wages. Value of products less cost of materials, supplies, fuel, purchased electric energy, and contract work. See GENERAL EXPLANATIONS-Value added by manufacture. TABLE 4. TABLE 3.-VALUE OF PRODUCTS FOR THE UNITED STATES: 1939 AND 1937 -PRODUCTS, BY KIND, QUANTITY, AND VALUE, FOR THE UNITED STATES: 1939 AND 1937 No detailed production data are collected for this industry; therefore, no figures are available for the above tables. |