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1864 | 1865 | |
---|---|---|
$ | ||
Woodware | ||
Boards, &c. | 424,560 | 518,645 |
Deal Ends and Scantling | 159,227 | 24,979 |
Fire and Lathwood | 108,648 | 97,859 |
Laths and Palings | 939 | 4,495 |
Shingles | 36,350 | 22,836 |
Spars and Knees | 19,805 | 19,510 |
Staves, Hoops and Shooks | 76,374 | 45,855 |
Sweeps and Oars | - | 6,776 |
Timber, all | 29,937 | 21,630 |
Manufactured | 24,716 | 13,449 |
Total | 880,556 | 776,034 |
Notes: - The timber of Newfoundland is spruce of small size, and lumbering can hardly be said to exist as a distinct branch of industry. - There are no wild lumber lands in Prince Edward Island. The merchantable timber has been long exhausted. |
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Source: Statistics Canada, The Canada Year Book, 1867. |