Skip to main content

1899-10-28: Manufacturers' Review, Birmingham, Alabama, Volume 1, Issue 2

View
@ Auburn University

Manufacturers' Review Co

Description

This is the volume I, issue 2, October 28, 1899 issue of Manufacturers Review: A Semi-Monthly Journal Devoted to the Industrial Development of the Southeast, a newspaper published semi-monthly by Manufacturers' Review Co. in Birmingham, Alabama. The newspaper includes news, information, facts, correspondence, editorials, illustrated ads, and articles of interest related to industry and technology. Topics include business, economics, industry, technology, politics, and statistics. Articles vary greatly in length and may be written by newspaper staff or outside contributors; summarized or copied from other newspapers; or summarized statements from public figures. First two pages have large sections missing. This item has been aggregated as part of the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL)'s "Deeply Rooted: The Agricultural & Rural History of the American South" project.Work and aim of the Review; Foundries pushed with orders; New railroads in the South; Lumber resources of the South; The Huntsville convention; Flour milling in the South; Cotton milling in the Southeast; Iron production, October 1; Negro labor in cotton mills; Volume and prospects of business; Huntsville convention program; Cotton mill labor: Wages in North Carolina mills--Scarcity of labor increasing, and the use of Negro labor becomes possible--The case discussed; Cotton milling: Various systems of computing the cost of manufacture; Correspondence: Review of the Southern markets; Iron and steel and their products; Coal and coke; Mobile; Lumber; Lumber news and notes; Staves; Timber-hewn; Timber--sawn; Naval stores; Fertilizers--Oil meal; Nashville; Lumber; Hardware; Phosphate; The Munger system; A word defined; Great coal combine; Railroad construction for past...
Type:
Text
Contributors:
Finch, N. P. T
View Original At:

Record Contributed By

Auburn University

Record Harvested From

Digital Library of Georgia