THE WEEK'S PRICE CHANGES
Pl^RIBilillBiES
August 14, 1950 1 1
Advances Cl'RRENT
PREVIOUS
I Acetaldehyde. tanks S 0.10
1 ll>.
! Alcohol, l b . 1 Butyl 1 Denatured 1 SI) 2 Β
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
I
si) ι
Ethyl I.Mihuty]. t a n k s n-Proiiyl. tank> Aluminum s u l f a t e . com in.. c « t . Ammonia, l b . Ammonium chloride. p r a y . buld. cwt. Amyl acetate. I k Aniline, tankf?. lb. Bleaching p o w d e r . cwt. Butyl stéarate, c l . Casein, i n d . , l b . Argentine, l b . Cresols. t a n b * . 11».
rsr
I Dipropylene g l y c o l . 1 tanks, l b . 1 Ethyl acetate, 8 5 % . 1 tanks I Lead acetate w h i t e . 1 bbl.. c w t .
0.13
0.12
0.46 0.46* j 0.1767 0.13 0.09
0.40 0.41 0.1765 0.12 O.OS
1.6Λ l.fiS
1.50 1 40
6.95 0.19» s 0.16
6.50 0.19 0.15
Ô.00 0.32 0.29 0.35
4.50 0.27 0.26» , 0.32
0.13' s 0.12» ·
0.12 0.11»/?
Schwarz fine chemicals satisfy the e x a c t i n g requirements o f
0 14
0 13
products intended f o r use in biochemical o r clinical research.
0.10
0.09
1 1 I I 1 1 1 1 I
m •aw! Because o f their influence on cell b e h a v i o r a n d metabolism, t h e r e is a g r o w i n g interest in these fine chemicals now a v a i l a b l e under t h e Schwarz l a b e l :
0.21 Gran. 0.21 Pow'd. 12.65-12.75 Menthol, l b . Nitrobenzene, t e c h . . 0.09 tank.ll>. Phenol. L ' S P . s y n t h . . 0.15» s tanks P i n e oil, d e s t . dist.. 0.64 gal. Potassium s t a n n a t e . 0.676 1 lb. 1 Shellac, b l e a c h e d , l b . 0.52-53 1 Bone d r y 3.50 - 4 . 0 0 I Ceylon 1 Lemon 0.48-49 1 No. I 0.46-47 2 0.44-45 [ Orange 0.62-64 I Refined, b b l . 0.42-43 TX 0.587 1 Sodiuinstantiate, lb. 1.05 1 Stannic o x i d e , l b . 1 Stannous c h l o r i d e , l b . 0.72» s 0.8845 1 Anhydrous, l b . 1.41 Stannous o x i d e , lb. 0.9924 Stannous s u l f a t e , l b . 1.06 T i n . lb. T i n tetrachloride, l b . 0.62 Tricresyl p h o s p h a t e . 0.32» * tanks, l b . 0.26 Zinc yellow, l b . Declines 2 - A mino-2-methylS0.60 1-propanol. l b . Nitropar&ffins. lb. Nitroethane 0.25 Nitromethane 0.25 1-Nitropropane 0.23 »/« 2-Nitropropane 0.25
I
S 0.09»/·
A d e n i n e , guanine, xanthine, h y p o x a n t h i n e , a n d their salts; uracil,
thymine,
thiouracil,
5-methylthiouracil,
6-methyl-
thiouracil.
Write
for revised
price
list
0.19' 4 0.19» * 12.60-12.75 0.08
^^&4***^-
0.l3»/2 0.61 0.616 0.50-51 2.ÔO -3.75 0.46-47 0.44-45 0.42-43 0.6O-61 0.4O-41 0.527 0.99 0.66» A 0.8223 1.35 0.9309 0.99 0.56 .1 0.30 0.21
LABORATORIES, I N C . 2 0 2 East 4 4 t h Street NEW Y O R K 17, N . Y .
FOR THE CHEMICAL INDUSTRY \M
1 1 1
Sheet, Wire, Tubing, Gauze and Fine Foils.
$0.65
Laboratory Wares of all description.
0.30 0.30 0.30 0.30
Stills, Retorts, Electrodes and other Special Process Equipment to order. Salts and Solutions. Platinum Metal Catalysts — Concentrated forms and on carriers.
In this e r a of rising prices price d e clines are a novelty. Commercial Solvents Corp. has made price reductions of 10 to 2 5 % o n its nitroparaffins a n d derivatives, made possible b y marked improvements in manufacturing process. N e w prices for t h e four basic nitroparaffins are: nitxoethane, nitromethane, a n d 2-nitropropane, 2 5 cents per pound; 1nitropropane, 23.25 cents, all in drums, less than carloads. Other price reductions have been made by E - I. d u Font de Nemours & Co., inc., in the price of t w o grades of "Fabrilite"—supported vinyl plastic sheetings sold to furniture manufacturers for upholstery. The reduction on o n e grade was 5 cents per yard; on another, 10 cents. V O L U M E
2 8,
Palladium, Iridium, Osmium, Rhodium and Ruthenium. We pay highest prices for scrap platinum and have facilities for prompt recovery of spent platinum and palladium catalysts.
WE INVITE YOUR INQUIRIES AND WILL SEND O N REQUEST FOLDERS: N - 2 0 , "Platinum, Gold and Silver for Science, Industry and the Arts" Ν - 2 1 , "Platinum and Palladium Catalysts".
THE AMERICAN PLATINUM WORKS 2 3.1, Ν ΈΜ J ER S Ε Y R. R . A V Ε.,
N O . 34 » » A U GUST
PRECIOUS
21,1 9 5 0
METALS
sitiCE
Ν Ε W A R Κ 5, H . J. 1875
ι,
i
/
2925
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