Full text: A survey of the trade in rubber manufactured goods

20%- 
the 
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of 
red. 
and 
om 
ses 
be 
‘ted 
her 
are 
rer- 
and 
ons 
‘ore 
rns 
ted 
age 
000 
000 
000 
From the United States. 
: | 
From Germany. 
¢ 
Rubber thread ive + wae 
Elastic webbing roe ver 
Rubberized piece goods and 
hospital sheeting. 
Rubber toys and balls wen | 
Rubber balloons i lis 
Rubber gloves win woe 
Rubber water bottles and 
fountain syringes. 
Jther Druggists’ rubber 
sundries. 
Fountain pens po oo 
Rubber bands and erasers ... 
Bathing caps ... o ee 
Electrical hard rubber goods 
Other hard rubber goods ... 
Rubber and friction tape ... 
Waterproof outer garments ... | 
Waterproof auto-cloth ns 
Other miscellaneous rubber 
manufactures. 
362,800 
266,200 
178.000 
Rubber thread ees es 
Fabric with rubber thread ; 
rubber goods with textiles. 
Rubber solution ee it 
Soft rubber paste and rolled 
sheets thereof ; cuttings of 
rubber ; rubber sheets with 
wire rolled in ; all not vul- 
canized ; reclaimed rubber; 
gutta-percha paper. 
Cut sheets of rubber, not vul- 
canised, unmanufactured. 
Wares of soft rubber n.e.i., 
floor coverings; rubber 
sheets combined with 
fabric ; iron rollers coated 
with rubber. : 
Rubber print cloths for fac- 
tories and card cloth for 
carding factories. 
Nagon covers of coarse fabric 
coated with rubber. 
Hard rubber :— 
Paste, not vulcanised and 
for dental purposes. 
In sheets, bars, rough 
pressed goods unworked. 
Tubes of hardened rubber, 
not further worked. 
Other goods of hardened 
rubber. 
Other miscellaneous rubber 
manufactures. 
178,000 
1,075,000 
41,800 
54,500 
56,150 
16.500 
26,750 
124.000 
[8.500 
380,000 
124,000 
77,100 
57,500 | 
72,600 
99,250 
160,000 
266,000 
538.000 
20,000 
1.838.000 
29,000 
1.080 
5,650 
46,800 
6,025 
474.000 
240 
2 978.900 
3.824.645 
XIII.—THE EXPORT TRADE OF FRANCE IN RUBBER 
MANUFACTURED GOODS. 
65. The figures of French exports have been omitted from the 
foregoing comparative tables on account of material differences in 
she classification of the French trade statistics. Therefore, the 
export trade, which is large, must be treated separately. As may 
be seen from the table attached to Appendix III the headings in 
the French official export returns relating to rubber manufactures 
do not correspond with those of the other principal exporting 
countries, and details of the exports to different countries are only 
given for tyres and for the total of rubber manufactures. Even 
in the case of tyres, one heading includes all kinds of outer covers, 
inner tubes and solid tyres, and the exports to each country are given 
by weight only and not by number or value. The United States 
Department of Commerce, in discussing these French returns, 
assume that the outer covers for motor cars included in the return 
French 
statistics 
not com- 
parable 
with others.
	        
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