Flooring, ceiling, interior finish, etc 



Sash, doors, blinds, columns, scrolls, etc.__ 



Boxes, crates, baskets, etc 



Cars (including repairs to same) 



Vehicles and parts (especially spokes) 



Excelsior 



Chairs , 



Cigar-boxes (mostly tupelo gum) 



Agricultural implements 



Furniture (including kitchen cabinets) 



Handles (mostly of hickory, and for axes) 



Sporting and athletic goods 



Shuttles and picker-sticks 



Store and bank fixtures 



Ships and boats 



Woodenware, etc 



Coffins and caskets 



Miscellaneous 



Total 



554,388 



65,183 



21,510 



18,294 



7,381 



5,700 



4,801 



3,150 



2,450 



2,420 



1,275 



1,152 



775 



720 



511 



303 



300 



125 



$6,500,000 



850,000 



232,000 



350,000 



176,000 



45,450 



67,000 



29,600 



50,000 



33,500 



26,500 



26,800 



11,000 



20,000 



7,715 



3,460 



4,800 



3,000 



690,000 



$8,400,000 



Cooperage stock, a very important item in this state, 

 is not included in the above table, but some statistics of 

 this industry for 1909 will be found a little farther on. 



Rough lumber, etc. — The next table is compiled from 

 two publications of the U. S. Census Bureau, namely, 

 Bulletin 77, on lumber and timber products for 1905, a 

 quarto published in 1907, and "Forest products of the 

 United States, 1909," an octavo bulletin without a num- 

 ber, prepared in co-operation with the U. S. Forest Serv- 

 ice, and published in 1911. It shows the quantity and 

 value of rough lumber, laths and shingles, produced in 

 Alabama in the years named. No indication is given of 

 how much of the wood, if any, grew outside of the state, 

 but timber, especially pine, is not usually hauled very far 

 before it is sawed, and the quantity brought in from 

 other states to mills near the border is probably just 

 about balanced by that hauled across the state line a 

 short distance in the other direction. 



