1992 Census -Retail Trade_Area Series_ Kansas

Reviews
Shared by: Lisa Baker
Stats
views:
55
rating:
not rated
reviews:
0
posted:
2/14/2008
language:
English
pages:
0
JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 34 OUTPUT: Tue Nov 8 09:28:02 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/17/01cvr Census of Retail Trade RC92-A-17 GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES Kansas U.S. Department of Commerce Economics and Statistics Administration BUREAU OF THE CENSUS JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 2 SESS: 34 OUTPUT: Tue Nov 8 09:28:02 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/17/01cvr Census of Retail Trade RC92-A-17 GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES Kansas Issued November 1994 U.S. Department of Commerce Ronald H. Brown, Secretary David J. Barram, Deputy Secretary Economics and Statistics Administration Everett M. Ehrlich, Under Secretary for Economic Affairs BUREAU OF THE CENSUS Martha Farnsworth Riche, Director JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 27 OUTPUT: Fri Oct 14 16:10:59 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/02ack Acknowledgments Many persons participated in the various activities of the 1992 Census of Retail Trade. The overall planning and review of the census operations were performed by the Economic Census Staff of the Economic Planning and Coordination Division. This report was prepared in the Services Division. Bobby E. Russell, Assistant Chief for Census Programs, was responsible for the overall planning, management, and coordination of the census of retail trade. Planning and implementation were under the direction of Anne S. Russell, Chief, Retail Census Branch, with primary staff assistance by Fay Dorsett, Charles F. Brady, Pamela J. Palmer, Thomas G. Dassel, Jennifer E. Lins, Cheryl E. Merkle, Barbara T. Parlett, Maria P. Ray, Barbara A. Collier, Venita L. Holland, and Judith O. Belt. Systems and procedures for mailout, receipt, correspondence, data input, industry classification, other clerical processing, administrative record processing, quality control, and the associated electronic computer programs, were developed in the Economic Planning and Coordination Division. Mailout preparation and receipt operations, clerical and analytical review activities, data keying, and geocoding review were performed by the staff of the Data Preparation Division, Judith N. Petty, Acting Chief. Geographic coding procedures and associated computer programs were developed by the staff of the Geography Division. The computer processing systems were developed and coordinated in the Economic Statistical Methods and Programming Division, Charles P. Pautler, Jr., Chief. H. Ray Dennis, Assistant Chief for Business Programs, was responsible for the design and implementation of the computer systems. The computer programs were prepared under the supervision of Steven G. McCraith, Chief, Utilities and Financial Census Branch, and William C. Wester, Chief, Business Census Branch, assisted by Barbara L. Lambert, Diane A. Conley, Mark T. Lachendro, Leatrice D. Hines, and David H. Hiller. Additional programming assistance was provided by Robert S. Jewett. Computer processing was performed in the Computer Services Division, Marvin D. Raines, Chief. The staff of the Administrative and Publications Services Division, Walter C. Odom, Chief, performed planning, design, composition, editorial review, and printing planning and procurement for publications and report forms. Bernadette J. Gayle provided publication coordination and editing. Special acknowledgment is also due the many businesses whose cooperation has contributed to the publication of these data. If you have any questions concerning the statistics in this report, call 301-763-7038. JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 33 OUTPUT: Wed Oct 12 08:21:39 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/04rstr Economics and Statistics Administration Everett M. Ehrlich, Under Secretary for Economic Affairs BUREAU OF THE CENSUS Martha Farnsworth Riche, Director Harry A. Scarr, Deputy Director Paula J. Schneider, Principal Associate Director for Programs Thomas L. Mesenbourg, Acting Associate Director for Economic Programs Thomas L. Mesenbourg, Assistant Director for Economic Programs ECONOMIC PLANNING AND COORDINATION DIVISION John P. Govoni, Chief SERVICES DIVISION Carole A. Ambler, Chief For sale by Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402. JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 47 OUTPUT: Mon May 2 14:22:29 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/history Introduction to the Economic Census PURPOSES AND USES OF THE ECONOMIC CENSUS The economic census is the major source of facts about the structure and functioning of the Nation’s economy. It provides essential information for government, business, industry, and the general public. The economic census furnishes an important part of the framework for such composite measures as the gross domestic product, input/output measures, production and price indexes, and other statistical series that measure short-term changes in economic conditions. Policymaking agencies of the Federal Government use the data, especially in monitoring economic activity and providing assistance to business. State and local governments use the data to assess business activities and tax bases within their jurisdictions and to develop programs to attract business. Trade associations study trends in their own and competing industries and keep their members informed of market changes. Individual businesses use the data to locate potential markets and to analyze their own production and sales performance relative to industry or area averages. Special programs also cover enterprise statistics and minority-owned and women-owned businesses. (The 1992 Census of Agriculture and 1992 Census of Governments are conducted separately.) The next economic census is scheduled to be taken in 1998 covering the year 1997. AVAILABILITY OF THE DATA The results of the economic census are available in printed reports for sale by the U.S. Government Printing Office and on compact discs for sale by the Census Bureau. Order forms for all types of products are available on request from Customer Services, Bureau of the Census, Washington, DC 20233-8300. A more complete description of publications being issued from this census is on the inside back cover of this document. Census facts are also widely disseminated by trade associations, business journals, and newspapers. Volumes containing census statistics are available in most major public and college libraries. Finally, State data centers in every State as well as business and industry data centers in many States also supply economic census statistics. AUTHORITY AND SCOPE Title 13 of the United States Code (sections 131, 191, and 224) directs the Census Bureau to take the economic census every 5 years, covering years ending in 2 and 7. The 1992 Economic Census consists of the following eight censuses: • Census of Retail Trade • Census of Wholesale Trade • Census of Service Industries • Census of Financial, Insurance, and Real Estate Industries • Census of Transportation, Communications, and Utilities • Census of Manufactures • Census of Mineral Industries • Census of Construction Industries RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES WHAT’S NEW IN 1992 The 1992 Economic Census covers more of the economy than any previous census. New for 1992 are data on communications, utilities, finance, insurance, and real estate, as well as coverage of more transportation industries. The economic, agriculture, and governments censuses now collectively cover nearly 98 percent of all economic activity. Among other changes, new 1992 definitions affect the boundaries of about a third of all metropolitan areas. Also, the Survey of Women-Owned Businesses has now been expanded to include all corporations. HISTORICAL INFORMATION The economic census has been taken as an integrated program at 5-year intervals since 1967 and before that for 1963, 1958, and 1954. Prior to that time, the individual subcomponents of the economic census were taken separately at varying intervals. INTRODUCTION III JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 2 SESS: 45 OUTPUT: Mon May 2 14:22:29 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/history The economic census traces its beginnings to the 1810 Decennial Census, when questions on manufacturing were included with those for population. Coverage of economic activities was expanded for 1840 and subsequent censuses to include mining and some commercial activities. In 1902, Congress established a permanent Census Bureau and directed that a census of manufactures be taken every 5 years. The 1905 Manufactures Census was the first time a census was taken apart from the regular every-10-year population census. The first census of business was taken in 1930, covering 1929. Initially it covered retail and wholesale trade and construction industries, but it was broadened in 1933 to include some of the service trades. The 1954 Economic Census was the first census to be fully integrated—providing comparable census data across economic sectors, using consistent time periods, concepts, definitions, classifications, and reporting units. It was the first census to be taken by mail, using lists of firms provided by the administrative records of other Federal agencies. Since 1963, administrative records also have been used to provide basic statistics for very small firms, reducing or eliminating the need to send them census questionnaires. The Enterprise Statistics Program, which publishes combined data from the economic census, was made possible with the implementation of the integrated census program in 1954. The range of industries covered in the economic censuses has continued to expand. The census of construction industries began on a regular basis in 1967, and the scope of service industries was broadened in 1967, 1977, and 1987. The census of transportation began in 1963 as a set of surveys covering travel, transportation of commodities, and trucks, but expanded in 1987 to cover business establishments in several transportation industries. For 1992, these statistics are incorporated into a broadened census of transportation, communications, and utilities. Also new for 1992 is the census of financial, insurance, and real estate industries. This is part of a gradual expansion in coverage of industries previously subjected to government regulation. The Survey of Minority-Owned Business Enterprises was first conducted as a special project in 1969 and was incorporated into the economic census in 1972 along with the Survey of Women-Owned Businesses. An economic census has also been taken in Puerto Rico since 1909, in the Virgin Islands of the United States and Guam since 1958, and in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands since 1982. Statistical reports from the 1987 and earlier censuses provide historical figures for the study of long-term time series and are available in some large libraries. All of the census data published since 1967 are still available for sale on microfiche from the Census Bureau. AVAILABILITY OF MORE FREQUENT ECONOMIC DATA While the census provides complete enumerations every 5 years, there are many needs for more frequent data as well. The Census Bureau conducts a number of monthly, quarterly, and annual surveys, with the results appearing in publication series such as Current Business Reports (retail and wholesale trade and service industries), the Annual Survey of Manufactures, Current Industrial Reports, and the Quarterly Financial Report. Most of these surveys, while providing more frequent observations, yield less kind-of-business and geographic detail than the census. The County Business Patterns program offers annual statistics on the number of establishments, employment, and payroll classified by industry within each county. SOURCES FOR MORE INFORMATION More information about the scope, coverage, classification system, data items, and publications for each of the economic censuses and related surveys is published in the Guide to the 1992 Economic Census and Related Statistics. More information on the methodology, procedures, and history of the census will be published in the History of the 1992 Economic Census . Contact Customer Services for information on availability. IV INTRODUCTION RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 29 OUTPUT: Tue Jul 12 15:21:37 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/07txtint Census of Retail Trade GENERAL The 1992 Census of Retail Trade, part of the 1992 Economic Census, covered retail trade as defined in the Standard Industrial Classification Manual: 19871 (SIC). It included all establishments primarily engaged in selling merchandise for personal or household consumption and rendering services incidental to the sale of the goods. The census excluded governmental organizations classified in the covered industries except for liquor stores operated by State and local governments. Data for direct sellers (SIC 5963) with no paid employees and post exchanges, ship stores, and similar establishments operated on military posts by agencies of the Federal Government were not included. The basic tabulations in this report do not include data for establishments which are auxiliary (primary function is providing a service, such as warehouses) to retail establishments within the same organization. Data for auxiliaries are presented in a subsequent report issued as part of the 1992 Enterprise Statistics reports. For the 1992 Census of Retail Trade, large- and mediumsize firms, plus all firms known to operate more than one establishment, were sent questionnaires to be completed and returned to the Census Bureau by mail. For most very small firms, including those with no paid employees, data from existing administrative records of other Federal agencies were used instead. These records provided basic information on location, kind of business, sales, payroll, number of employees, and legal form of organization. In addition, more detailed information for selected kinds of business was obtained on the various questionnaires. Appendix A gives a more detailed explanation of census coverage and methodology. GEOGRAPHIC AREAS COVERED This report series presents data for the following areas: 1. The United States as a whole. 2. Each State and the District of Columbia. 3. Each consolidated metropolitan statistical area (CMSA) and primary metropolitan statistical area (PMSA) defined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) as of June 30, 1993. A CMSA is an area used to facilitate the presentation and analysis of data for large concentrations of metropolitan populations. It includes two or more contiguous PMSA’s which have a population of at least 1,000,000 2 and which meet specific criteria of urban character and of social and economic integration. 4. Each metropolitan statistical area (MSA) defined by the OMB as of June 30, 1993. An MSA is an integrated economic and social unit with a population nucleus of at least 50,000 inhabitants. 2 Each MSA consists of one or more counties meeting standards of metropolitan character; in New England, cities and towns rather than counties are the component geographic units. 5. The area within the State outside metropolitan areas (MA’s). 6. Each county or county equivalent. 3 Counties are the primary divisions of States, except in Louisiana where they are called parishes and in Alaska where they are called boroughs and census areas. Maryland, Missouri, Nevada, and Virginia have one place or more that is independent of any county organization and constitutes primary divisions of their States. These places are treated as counties and as places. 7. Each consolidated city. 3 Consolidated cities are consolidated governments which consist of separately incorporated municipalities. 8. Each municipality of 2,500 inhabitants or more incorporated as a city, borough, village, or town.2 3 For the economic census, boroughs and census areas in Alaska and boroughs in New York are not included in this category. CENSUS DISCLOSURE RULES In accordance with Federal law governing census reports, no data are published that would disclose the operations of an individual establishment or business. However, the number of establishments in a kind-of-business classification is not considered a disclosure; therefore, this information may be released even though other information is withheld. 1 Standard Industrial Classification Manual: 1987. For sale by Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402. Stock No. 041-001-00314-2. 2 According to the 1990 Census of Population or subsequent special census. 3 Those defined as of January 1, 1992. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES CENSUS OF RETAIL TRADE V JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 2 SESS: 29 OUTPUT: Tue Jul 12 15:21:37 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/07txtint 9. Special economic urban areas (SEUA’s), which include townships in Michigan, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania and towns in New York, Wisconsin, and the six New England States with 10,000 inhabitants or more. 4 DOLLAR VALUES All dollar values presented in this report are expressed in current dollars; i.e., 1992 data are expressed in 1992 dollars and 1987 data in 1987 dollars. Consequently, when making comparisons to prior years, users of the data should consider the inflation that has occurred. tabular form. The data will be in summary form and subject to the same rules prohibiting disclosure of confidential information (including name, address, kind of business, or other data for individual business establishments or companies) as are the regular publications. Special tabulations are prepared on a cost basis. A request for a cost estimate, as well as exact specifications on the type and format of the data to be provided, should be directed to the Chief, Services Division, Bureau of the Census, Washington, DC 20233. To discuss a special tabulation before submitting specifications, call 1-800-541-8345. RELIABILITY OF DATA All data compiled in this report originated from either census questionnaires or administrative records of other Federal agencies and, therefore, are not subject to sampling errors. However, the data are subject to nonsampling errors. Nonsampling errors can be attributed to many sources: inability to identify all cases in the actual universe; definition and classification difficulties; differences in the interpretation of questions; errors in recording or coding the data obtained; and other errors of collection, response, coverage, and estimation for missing or misreported data. The accuracy of these tabulated data is determined by the joint effects of the various nonsampling errors. No direct measurement of these effects has been obtained except for estimation for missing or misreported data; however, precautionary steps were taken in all phases of the collection, processing, and tabulation of the data in an effort to minimize the effects of nonsampling errors. The Census Bureau obtains on computer tape limited information extracted from administrative records of other Federal agencies. This information is used in conjunction with other information available to the Census Bureau to develop estimates for nonemployers, small employers, and other establishments for which responses were not received in time for publication. For an indication of the extent that data included in these reports were obtained from the administrative records of other Federal agencies and from estimation, rather than reports directly from respondents, see appendix E. Also, see appendix A for a more detailed explanation of census coverage and methodology. ABBREVIATIONS AND SYMBOLS The following abbreviations and symbols are used in this publication: – (D) Represents zero. Withheld to avoid disclosing data for individual companies; data are included in broader kindof-business totals. Independent city. Not available. Not comparable. Not applicable. Consolidated metropolitan statistical area. Metropolitan area. Metropolitan statistical area. Not elsewhere classified. Primary metropolitan statistical area. Part. Revised. Standard industrial classification. (IC) (NA) (NC) (X) CMSA MA MSA n.e.c. PMSA pt. r SIC The following symbols are used in this publication to show employment size ranges for employment data that has been withheld to avoid disclosing data for individual companies (employment size range codes are provided for the first time in the 1992 Economic Census): Symbol Employment Size AA BB CC EE FF GG HH II JJ KK LL MM 0–19 20–99 100–249 250–499 500–999 1,000–2,499 2,500–4,999 5,000–9,999 10,000–24,999 25,000–49,999 50,000–99,999 100,000 or more SPECIAL TABULATIONS Special tabulations of data collected in the 1992 Census of Retail Trade may be obtained, depending on availability of time and personnel, on diskette, computer tape, or in 4 According to the 1990 Census of Population or subsequent special census. VI CENSUS OF RETAIL TRADE RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 9 OUTPUT: Thu Jan 27 14:57:34 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/07tblgui Users’ Guide for Locating Statistics in This Report by Table Number Table Information shown in tables 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 GEOGRAPHIC AREAS The State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CMSA’s and MSA’s in the State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PMSA’s in the State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Area of the State not in any CMSA, PMSA, or MSA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Counties in the State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Places in the State . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DATA ITEMS3 Establishments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Annual payroll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . First-quarter payroll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Paid employees for pay period including March 12, 1992 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sales per establishment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sales per employee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Annual payroll per employee. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Employees per establishment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1987 to 1992 comparative statistics (establishments, sales, payroll, employees). . . . . Counties ranked by volume of 1992 sales . . . . . . . Places ranked by volume of 1992 sales. . . . . . . . . 1 2 X X X X X X X 2 X 1 1 X 2 X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 2 X Includes areas with 350 retail establishments or more. Includes places with 2,500 inhabitants or more, according to the 1990 Census of Population or subsequent special census. 3 See Explanation of Terms, appendix A. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES USERS’ GUIDE VII JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 18 OUTPUT: Thu Mar 17 15:05:09 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/07txtgui7 Users’ Guide for Locating Statistics in the 1992 Census of Retail Trade Reports Information shown in reports by kind of business or industry category Sales size and employment size of estab- Concenlishtration ments ratios of and largest firms firms Report and geographic area Number of establishments GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES United States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CMSA, PMSA, MSA . . . . . . . . . . . County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Place . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NONEMPLOYER STATISTICS SERIES United States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CMSA, PMSA, MSA . . . . . . . . . . . County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Place . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ESTABLISHMENT AND FIRM SIZE (INCLUDING LEGAL FORM OF ORGANIZATION) United States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MEASURES OF VALUE PRODUCED, CAPITAL EXPENDITURES, DEPRECIABLE ASSETS, AND OPERATING EXPENSES United States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MERCHANDISE LINE SALES United States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CMSA, PMSA, MSA . . . . . . . . . . . MISCELLANEOUS SUBJECTS United States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CMSA, PMSA, MSA . . . . . . . . . . . ZIP CODES State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . See footnotes at end of table. X X X X X X X X X X X X 3 3 Sales ($1,000) Payroll ($1,000) Selected Number ratios of emand ployees rankings Merchandise line sales Single units and multiunits Legal form of organization Selected topics X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 1 3 X 1 3 X 1 1 X X X 1 3 X 1 3 X 1 1 2 X X X X X X X X X X X X X 4 X X X X 3 3 X X X 3 3 X X X 5 5 X X 5 X 3 X 3 X 3 X 3 X 3 X VIII USERS’ GUIDE RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 2 SESS: 17 OUTPUT: Thu Mar 17 15:05:09 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/07txtgui7 Information shown in reports by kind of business or industry category Sales size and employment size of estab- Concenlishtration ments ratios of and largest firms firms Report and geographic area Number of establishments SPECIAL REPORT SERIES—SELECTED STATISTICS United States . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . State. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CMSA, MSA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 2 3 1 Sales ($1,000) Payroll ($1,000) Selected Number ratios of emand ployees rankings Merchandise line sales Single units and multiunits Legal form of organization Selected topics X X X 1 X X X X X X X X X X X X 6 7 6 7 X X 6 7 X Includes data for all establishments, establishments with payroll, and establishments without payroll, by kind of business. Data available by sales size of establishments without payroll only. Data available on CD-ROM only. 4 Includes value produced, capital expenditures, depreciable assets, and selected operating expenses detail. 5 For United States, States, and MA’s, includes data on number of gasoline pumps and gallon sales of gasoline and other automotive fuels; storage capacity and number of tanks; establishments offering self-service sale of gasoline; on seating capacity and average cost per meal; on the number of pharmacists, number of prescriptions filled, and percent of prescriptions paid for by third parties; and floor space by selected kind of business. For United States and States only, includes data on number of automotive service bays, number of automotive mechanics, number of boat docking/storage slips, principal type of supplier, gasoline service stations operating 24 hours, shoe stores operating as self-service and concessions, types of food service, types of menus, percent of food and beverage sales by day-part, franchise holders, concession operators, contract feeding and automatic merchandising machine operators, number of opticians, part- and full-time employment, class of customer, and leased departments. 6 Includes percent of retail sales in MA’s, in non-MA’s, in central cities, and outside central cities within MA’s. 7 Includes percent of retail sales inside and outside central cities within each individual MA. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES USERS’ GUIDE IX Contents Kansas [Page numbers listed here omit the prefix that appears as part of the number of each page] Page Introduction to the Economic Census Census of Retail Trade Users’ Guide for Locating Statistics in This Report by Table Number Users’ Guide for Locating Statistics in the 1992 Census of Retail Trade Reports Summary of Findings III V VII VIII 2 FIGURES 1. 2. 3. Maps Percent Change in Sales and Annual Payroll: 1987 to 1992 Annual Payroll Per Employee: 1992, 1987, and 1982 Percent of Total Retail Sales by Selected Kinds of Business: 1992, 1987, and 1982 3 4 5 6 TABLES 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Summary Statistics for the State: 1992 Selected Ratios for the State: 1992 Comparative Statistics for the State: 1992 and 1987 Summary Statistics for Counties and for Places With 2,500 Inhabitants or More: 1992 Summary Statistics for Places With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Summary Statistics for Counties With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Summary Statistics for Metropolitan Areas: 1992 Summary Statistics for the Area Outside Metropolitan Areas: 1992 Places With 2,500 Inhabitants or More Ranked by Volume of Sales: 1992 Counties Ranked by Volume of Sales: 1992 8 10 12 14 22 29 37 42 44 44 APPENDIXES A. B. C. D. E. F. G. General Explanation Sample Report Form and Instructions Kind-of-Business Titles and Reporting-Form Numbers Metropolitan Areas Percent of Sales Data Based on Administrative Records and Estimation for the State: 1992 Geographic Notes Establishments in Business Any Time During Year and Establishments in Business at End of Year for the State: 1992 and 1987 A–1 B–1 C–1 D–1 E–1 F–1 G–1 Publication Program Inside back cover RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–1 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:43 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:NONE TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 1 TSF:TIPS92-10430767.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 10:43:17 UTF:TIPS93-10430767.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 10:43:17 META:TIPS96-10430767.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 10:43:41 JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 2 OUTPUT: Tue Nov 8 09:28:48 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/17/07txtsum Summary of Findings Data from the 1992 Census of Retail Trade show that Kansas’ 16,255 retail stores with payroll had sales totaling $17.6 billion. In 1987, 16,797 retail stores had sales of $13.4 billion. The 1992 data represent an increase of 31.1 percent in total retail sales for the State. For establishments with payroll in 1992, sales of new and used car dealers accounted for 19.2 percent of the State’s total sales by retailers compared with 19.0 percent in 1987. Other leading retail kinds of business in 1992 were grocery stores with 18.7 percent of sales, gasoline service stations with 8.0 percent, and refreshment places with 5.0 percent. For 1992, sales for establishments with payroll in the State averaged $1.1 million per establishment, compared with $798 thousand in 1987. In 1992, new and used car dealers averaged $10.1 million per establishment; miscellaneous general merchandise stores, $3.2 million; grocery stores, $2.8 million; catalog and mail-order houses, $2.3 million; and lumber and other building materials dealers, $1.8 million. For retail establishments with payroll, 1992 sales per employee averaged $95 thousand. New and used car dealers had sales per employee of $362 thousand, which contrasts sharply with the $23 thousand per employee average for restaurants. The 1992 payroll of retailers in the State amounted to $2.0 billion, compared with $1.6 billion for 1987. Payroll as a percent of sales of establishments with payroll averaged 11.5 percent for all retailers, 28.7 percent for retail bakeries, compared with 6.2 percent for gasoline service stations. There were 185,810 paid employees (full- and part-time) engaged in retail trade in the State as of mid-March 1992, compared with 174,947 employees in 1987. Large employers included refreshment places with 33,595 employees, restaurants with 27,110 employees, and grocery stores with 25,222 employees. KS–2 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES Figure 1. Percent Change in Sales and Annual Payroll: 1987 to 1992 (Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text) Sales Payroll 31.1 Retail trade 28.8 Building materials and garden supplies stores (SIC 52) 15.9 9.5 50.2 37.1 General merchandise stores (SIC 53) Food stores (SIC 54) 20.1 32.1 31.5 22.5 Automotive dealers (SIC 55 ex. 554) Gasoline service stations (SIC 554) Apparel and accessory stores (SIC 56) Furniture and homefurnishings stores (SIC 57) 22.8 12.0 27.0 13.8 30.9 17.4 Eating and drinking places (SIC 58) 35.4 37.2 Drug and proprietary stores (SIC 591) 33.8 19.9 Miscellaneous retail stores (SIC 59 ex. 591) 43.8 44.6 RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–3 Figure 2. Annual Payroll per Employee: 1992, 1987, and 1982 (In dollars. Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text) 1992 1987 1982 10,883 Retail trade 8,972 7,900 Building materials and garden supplies stores (SIC 52) 15,194 14,203 12,122 11,429 General merchandise stores (SIC 53) 8,870 7,601 12,205 Food stores (SIC 54) 9,813 9,716 23,234 Automotive dealers (SIC 55 ex. 554) 14,903 10,270 18,372 Gasoline service stations (SIC 554) 9,490 8,097 Apparel and accessory stores (SIC 56) 8,681 7,630 6,450 15,356 13,329 10,675 6,822 Furniture and homefurnishings stores (SIC 57) Eating and drinking places (SIC 58) 5,494 4,771 13,134 Drug and proprietary stores (SIC 591) 8,023 10,613 11,757 Miscellaneous retail stores (SIC 59 ex. 591) 8,849 8,109 Note: Data are based on 1987 Standard Industrial Classification. KS–4 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES Figure 3. Percent of Total Retail Sales by Selected Kinds of Business: 1992, 1987, and 1982 (Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text) 1992 1987 1982 Lumber and other building materials dealers (SIC 521) (D) 3.5 4.0 4.0 Department stores (incl. leased depts.) (SIC 531) (NA) 11.0 18.7 Grocery stores (SIC 541) 20.3 21.4 19.2 New and used car dealers (SIC 551) 17.2 8.0 19.0 Gasoline service stations (SIC 554) 8.5 10.2 4.0 4.2 4.8 4.7 4.7 4.2 3.6 Apparel and accessory stores (SIC 56) Furniture and homefurnishings stores (SIC 57) Restaurants (SIC 5812 pt.) 3.4 3.5 5.0 Refreshment places (SIC 5812 pt.) 4.8 4.1 3.0 Drug and proprietary stores (SIC 591) 2.9 2.7 Note: Data are based on 1987 Standard Industrial Classification. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–5 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_146 [ACEN,C_ARLEDGE] 10/25/94 12:24 PM MACHINE: EPCV22 DATA:VOL1_TIPS_APXB_01.TIPS;1 * 10/12/94 09:48:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 3 TSF:TIPS92-09482232.DAT;1 10/12/94 09:48:35 UTF:TIPS93-09482232.DAT;1 10/12/94 09:48:36 META:VOL1_TIPS96_APXB_01.DAT;6 10/12/94 09:49:15 Table 1. Summary Statistics for the State: 1992 For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) 185 810 7 241 4 582 4 121 461 1 556 861 242 22 238 (NA) JJ HH 12 398 3 846 FF 2 782 27 268 25 222 22 616 647 1 845 114 291 1 194 1 168 26 561 BB 219 AA 303 13 492 9 290 753 2 897 2 749 148 552 140 162 196 54 8 523 4 069 4 454 9 604 767 3 659 3 301 358 2 886 1 616 BB 249 AA 979 304 676 231 445 6 924 2 215 1 585 765 86 734 578 2 546 1 356 366 511 313 [Includes only establishments with payroll. appendix A] SIC code Kind of business Establishments (number) Retail trade 16 255 860 455 346 109 242 115 48 379 1 2 1 Sales ($1,000) 17 566 800 908 008 662 478 608 676 53 802 124 379 64 425 56 726 2 693 222 (D) (D) (D) 1 483 521 393 995 (D) 438 340 3 367 399 3 286 302 2 941 461 54 949 286 200 3 692 22 894 28 302 27 209 1 093 29 901 (D) 9 267 (D) 17 974 3 952 958 3 366 051 196 289 287 146 276 018 11 128 103 21 41 32 8 472 952 099 090 331 Annual payroll ($1,000) 2 022 204 110 022 76 640 68 467 8 173 17 269 11 256 4 857 254 166 (NA) (D) (D) 134 600 44 063 (D) 30 965 332 798 317 292 4 19 214 568 466 394 786 Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) 472 132 24 501 17 283 15 495 1 788 4 048 2 100 1 070 59 490 (NA) (D) (D) 30 621 10 437 (D) 7 689 79 627 76 70 1 4 064 206 055 628 175 769 1 854 1 809 45 940 (D) 377 (D) 505 70 967 54 752 2 925 11 210 10 830 380 2 080 516 652 737 175 21 077 8 936 12 141 20 510 2 196 6 670 5 554 1 116 6 452 3 926 (D) 575 (D) 2 342 766 1 266 387 879 24 163 9 044 5 175 3 116 194 1 865 1 943 8 4 1 1 1 001 392 497 063 049 52 521, 3 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 531 531 pt. 531 pt. 531 pt. 533 539 54 541 541 pt. 541 pt. 541 pt. 541 pt. 542 546 546 pt. 546 pt. 543, 4, 5, 9 543 544 545 549 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 553 pt. 553 pt. 555, 6, 7, 9 555 556 557 559 554 554 pt. 554 pt. 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 564, 9 564 569 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 5713 5714 5719 572 573 5731 5734 5735 5736 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) Department stores (excl. leased depts.) Conventional 1 Discount or mass merchandising 1 National chain 1 126 126 14 84 28 115 138 1 528 1 156 744 119 276 17 66 174 167 7 132 7 37 12 76 1 198 332 232 513 482 31 121 34 33 39 15 1 422 595 827 1 281 125 523 458 65 207 293 18 50 2 178 45 133 50 83 1 183 343 318 159 27 132 146 376 207 61 57 51 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Supermarkets and other general-line grocery stores Convenience food stores Convenience food/gasoline stores Delicatessens Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Retail bakeries Retail bakeries baking and selling selling only 3 214 8 129 7 954 175 4 241 (D) 1 634 (D) 2 286 313 470 242 909 13 294 47 672 45 797 1 875 9 2 3 3 595 249 007 631 708 Other food stores Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Miscellaneous food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. Gasoline service stations Gasoline/convenience food stores Other gasoline service stations and truck stops Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Other apparel and accessory stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores 1 401 154 628 211 772 943 706 464 64 417 229 243 205 890 23 353 233 082 139 960 (D) 17 586 (D) 84 267 29 420 39 762 14 338 25 424 823 585 259 953 150 89 4 55 152 715 939 498 87 531 37 583 49 948 83 375 8 692 27 145 23 159 3 986 25 395 16 471 (D) 2 307 (D) 9 516 3 360 5 672 1 640 4 032 106 326 39 311 23 138 14 137 805 8 196 8 324 35 19 6 4 4 553 806 808 361 578 66 227 347 204 75 41 25 253 993 205 185 870 See footnotes at end of table. KS–8 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 1 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 1. Summary Statistics for the State: 1992 Con. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) 68 126 65 27 1 33 3 435 110 619 595 111 [Includes only establishments with payroll. appendix A] For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. SIC code Kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) 1 742 239 1 658 626 51 886 93 096 429 825 169 673 Annual payroll ($1,000) 464 775 449 189 14 221 25 983 203 268 304 208 Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) 107 760 104 44 3 50 5 163 551 344 379 889 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 591 pt. 591 pt. 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 5943 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 596 5961 5962 5963 598 5983 5984 5989 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Drug stores Proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Stationery stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Nonstore retailers Catalog and mail-order houses Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling establishments Fuel dealers Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. Pet shops Art dealers Other miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 1Includes 2Includes 4 608 4 048 1 677 82 1 970 319 560 476 460 16 3 320 604 224 1 232 237 68 169 134 244 617 37 107 10 340 12 111 312 96 64 152 101 11 90 – 342 8 7 122 368 56 30 282 84 143 518 947 515 356 3 591 1 452 824 230 952 44 973 521 105 42 63 592 498 251 247 14 792 61 610 61 041 569 208 131 10 547 8 349 69 12 5 7 177 976 664 312 3 597 15 115 14 999 116 48 922 2 504 1 938 16 2 1 1 103 754 210 544 2 691 4 691 4 632 59 17 703 1 839 880 7 072 1 195 539 656 1 096 1 292 3 489 130 886 99 1 647 94 633 3 977 2 185 617 1 175 391 44 347 – 1 576 19 25 463 1 461 327 100 1 034 81 723 103 828 230 543 11 93 10 78 5 30 389 220 59 110 056 782 799 569 913 424 720 124 181 415 10 013 17 549 28 639 1 8 1 11 606 611 953 270 944 4 255 290 418 333 539 2 438 4 415 6 496 388 1 881 433 2 509 218 1 067 17 10 2 4 530 522 462 546 74 45 10 18 56 624 7 529 49 095 – 63 5 1 31 106 23 4 78 785 645 390 206 937 623 538 776 6 478 605 5 873 – 13 235 280 207 6 832 18 736 3 394 918 14 424 1 551 125 1 426 – 3 282 39 51 1 625 4 299 794 193 3 312 sales from catalog order desks. data for leased departments operated within department stores. Data for this line not included in broader kind-of-business totals. RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–9 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 2 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 2. Selected Ratios for the State: 1992 For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Sales [Includes only establishments with payroll. appendix A] SIC code Kind of business Per establishment (dollars) 1 080 701 1 055 823 1 455 996 1 759 179 493 596 513 963 560 217 1 181 792 7 106 127 Per employee 1 (dollars) 94 542 125 398 144 583 147 701 116 707 79 935 74 826 234 405 121 109 (NA) (D) (D) 119 658 102 443 (D) 157 563 123 493 130 130 84 155 32 295 061 929 122 386 Annual payroll per employee 1 (dollars) 10 883 15 194 16 726 16 614 17 729 11 098 13 073 20 070 11 429 (NA) (D) (D) 10 857 11 457 (D) 11 130 12 205 12 12 6 10 6 577 936 903 512 895 Employees per establishment 1 (number) 11 8 10 12 4 6 7 5 59 (NA) (D) (D) 148 137 (D) 20 18 22 30 5 7 7 4 7 7 4 4 (D) 6 (D) 4 11 28 3 6 6 5 5 4 5 5 4 6 7 5 7 6 7 7 6 14 6 (D) 5 (D) 6 7 5 5 5 6 6 5 5 3 6 4 7 7 6 9 6 Retail trade 52 521, 3 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 531 531 pt. 531 pt. 531 pt. 533 539 54 541 541 pt. 541 pt. 541 pt. 541 pt. 542 546 546 pt. 546 pt. 543, 4, 5, 9 543 544 545 549 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 553 pt. 553 pt. 555, 6, 7, 9 555 556 557 559 554 554 pt. 554 pt. 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 564, 9 564 569 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 5713 5714 5719 572 573 5731 5734 5735 5736 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) Department stores (excl. leased depts.) Conventional 2 Discount or mass merchandising 2 National chain 2 2 3 2 (D) (D) (D) 17 660 964 14 071 250 (D) 3 176 377 2 203 795 2 842 3 953 461 1 036 217 822 577 756 957 176 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Supermarkets and other general-line grocery stores Convenience food stores Convenience food/gasoline stores Delicatessens Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Retail bakeries Retail bakeries baking and selling selling only 346 879 162 655 162 928 156 143 226 523 (D) 250 459 (D) 236 500 3 299 631 10 138 708 846 073 559 739 572 651 358 968 855 645 1 245 822 555 140 647 424 821 400 78 674 23 704 23 295 42 038 53 299 (D) 42 315 (D) 59 320 292 985 362 331 260 676 99 118 100 407 75 189 187 156 253 163 154 449 800 698 724 278 11 045 6 808 6 810 6 731 7 560 (D) 7 461 (D) 7 545 23 234 26 147 17 655 16 456 16 660 12 669 17 16 18 18 13 382 064 562 526 111 Other food stores Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Miscellaneous food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. Gasoline service stations Gasoline/convenience food stores Other gasoline service stations and truck stops Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Other apparel and accessory stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores 1 985 340 055 817 934 635 551 494 515 336 164 397 154 390 173 539 73 559 83 986 62 652 62 372 65 232 80 763 86 609 (D) 70 627 (D) 86 075 96 776 58 820 62 069 57 133 118 946 117 360 94 117 57 75 733 275 430 610 10 270 9 236 11 214 8 681 11 332 7 419 7 016 11 134 8 799 10 192 (D) 9 265 (D) 9 720 11 053 8 391 7 100 9 061 15 356 17 748 14 18 9 11 598 480 360 166 438 323 449 541 359 277 1 126 000 477 679 (D) 351 720 (D) 473 410 653 778 298 962 286 760 306 313 696 183 757 880 472 564 182 420 176 245 926 439 453 610 923 990 1 232 722 507 545 304 869 544 255 114 580 136 151 205 80 82 392 175 478 597 652 14 401 13 14 18 8 14 964 606 601 534 626 See footnotes at end of table. KS–10 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 3 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 2. Selected Ratios for the State: 1992 Con. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Sales [Includes only establishments with payroll. appendix A] For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. SIC code Kind of business Per establishment (dollars) 378 090 409 373 632 449 293 609 541 012 832 646 Per employee 1 (dollars) 25 574 25 23 32 26 30 340 107 011 378 110 Annual payroll per employee 1 (dollars) 6 822 6 6 8 6 8 877 979 813 587 103 Employees per establishment 1 (number) 15 16 16 20 17 10 5 10 10 4 5 3 4 6 5 8 4 8 5 6 4 8 10 5 8 6 13 23 10 8 4 4 4 – 5 2 4 4 4 6 3 4 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 591 pt. 591 pt. 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 5943 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 596 5961 5962 5963 598 5983 5984 5989 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Drug stores Proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Stationery stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Nonstore retailers Catalog and mail-order houses Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling establishments Fuel dealers Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. Pet shops Art dealers Other miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 1Based on number of employees for pay period including March 12. 2Includes sales from catalog order desks. 3Includes data for leased departments operated within department stores. 150 255 1 090 225 1 120 339 224 438 437 598 382 371 200 772 423 445 621 374 370 139 338 243 31 268 110 626 111 260 60 864 82 067 125 586 51 106 73 88 78 96 755 283 388 413 5 497 13 134 13 178 9 644 11 757 5 735 9 488 9 10 10 11 782 859 508 146 609 873 425 525 373 652 298 876 1 079 231 492 274 811 467 900 085 750 090 74 565 80 362 66 077 85 105 109 47 62 48 97 100 95 93 046 849 081 704 904 063 993 743 917 970 9 136 13 583 8 208 12 9 19 6 10 6 18 20 16 15 354 719 727 843 043 722 680 786 747 778 1 249 103 2 292 958 924 703 726 414 560 634 684 455 545 500 – 186 705 198 255 290 421 151 279 506 625 571 787 590 839 267 348 144 818 171 114 141 484 – 40 297 55 67 73 72 45 76 473 105 600 400 194 242 380 186 16 568 13 750 16 925 – 8 14 8 14 12 10 9 13 398 737 280 756 824 379 180 950 Data for this line not included in broader kind-of-business totals. RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–11 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 4 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 3. Comparative Statistics for the State: 1992 and 1987 For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 Percent change 1987 to 1992 28.8 9.5 8.5 6.5 29.9 5.7 18.2 21.9 37.1 (NA) (D) (D) 76.2 –10.5 (D) 28.8 32.1 34.0 –12.8 4.8 5.3 –14.2 14.0 (D) 35.8 (D) 57.8 22.5 23.9 46.3 12.7 32.7 –76.0 13.9 15.8 8.3 14.5 31.4 12.0 13.8 .3 6.7 4.5 21.0 27.7 6.3 (D) –36.2 (D) 3.4 124.6 50.8 20.2 68.2 17.4 15.0 19.4 8.1 –7.6 51.1 1.8 23.3 7.9 71.4 114.9 2.2 37.2 37.1 44.9 –15.1 45.4 –11.6 40.2 [Includes only establishments with payroll. appendix A] Establishments SIC code Kind of business 1992 1987 (number) (number) Retail trade 52 521, 3 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 531 531 pt. 531 pt. 531 pt. 533 539 54 541 542 546 546 pt. 546 pt. 543, 4, 5, 9 543 544 545 549 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 553 pt. 553 pt. 555, 6, 7, 9 555 556 557 559 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 564, 9 564 569 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 5713 5714 5719 572 573 5731 5734 5735 5736 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) Department stores (excl. leased depts.) Conventional 1 Discount or mass merchandising 1 National chain 1 1 2 1 Sales Annual payroll 1992 ($1,000) 17 566 800 908 008 662 478 608 676 53 802 124 379 64 425 56 726 2 693 222 (D) (D) (D) 1 483 521 393 995 (D) 438 340 3 367 399 3 286 302 22 894 28 302 27 209 1 093 29 901 (D) 9 267 (D) 17 974 3 952 958 3 366 051 196 289 287 146 276 018 11 128 103 21 41 32 8 472 952 099 090 331 1987 ($1,000) 13 396 598 783 298 578 806 537 521 41 285 106 581 56 995 40 916 1 792 685 r1 Percent change 1987 to 1992 31.1 15.9 14.5 13.2 30.3 16.7 13.0 38.6 50.2 (D) (D) (D) 85.5 –.9 (D) 50.6 20.1 20.8 –15.7 3.9 3.5 16.2 3.0 (D) 41.2 (D) 42.5 31.5 32.1 69.0 11.8 38.7 –80.7 21.9 16.0 21.0 15.9 92.4 22.8 27.0 28.8 17.9 14.4 62.1 37.3 20.7 (D) –21.6 (D) 15.7 143.2 52.5 18.0 82.7 30.9 19.7 19.7 6.3 9.1 52.2 13.8 52.0 37.9 161.7 79.2 –7.9 35.4 34.9 37.8 –12.1 38.7 21.5 46.7 1992 ($1,000) 2 022 204 110 022 76 640 68 467 8 173 17 269 11 256 4 857 254 166 (NA) (D) (D) 134 600 44 063 (D) 30 965 332 798 317 214 3 214 8 129 7 954 175 4 241 (D) 1 634 (D) 2 286 313 470 242 909 13 294 47 672 45 797 1 875 9 2 3 3 595 249 007 631 708 1987 ($1,000) 1 569 548 100 445 70 606 64 312 6 294 16 336 9 520 3 983 185 404 (NA) 153 27 76 49 051 436 402 213 1992 (number) 185 810 7 241 4 582 4 121 461 1 556 861 242 22 238 (NA) JJ HH 12 398 3 846 FF 2 782 27 268 25 222 291 1 194 1 168 26 561 BB 219 AA 303 13 492 9 290 753 2 897 2 749 148 552 140 162 196 54 8 523 9 604 767 3 659 3 301 358 2 886 1 616 BB 249 AA 979 304 676 231 445 6 924 2 215 1 585 765 86 734 578 2 546 1 356 366 511 313 68 126 65 27 1 33 3 435 110 619 595 111 1987 (number) 174 947 7 072 4 427 3 978 449 1 489 884 272 20 902 (NA) 16 2 9 4 r1 16 255 860 455 346 109 242 115 48 379 126 126 14 84 28 115 138 1 528 1 156 66 174 167 7 132 7 37 12 76 1 198 332 232 513 482 31 121 34 33 39 15 1 422 1 281 125 523 458 65 207 293 18 50 2 178 45 133 50 83 1 183 343 318 159 27 132 146 376 207 61 57 51 4 608 4 048 1 677 82 1 970 319 560 16 797 995 560 432 128 258 121 56 404 118 118 17 71 30 110 176 1 766 1 313 91 206 198 8 156 8 50 28 70 1 300 408 173 580 487 93 139 34 40 52 13 1 576 1 429 154 564 526 38 202 366 28 81 6 224 27 143 68 75 1 214 340 291 153 32 106 180 403 251 44 46 62 4 186 3 671 1 625 91 1 680 275 515 473 555 138 082 604 452 1 438 241 799 397 808 462 465 881 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Retail bakeries Retail bakeries baking and selling selling only r48 939 291 155 r6 975 24 046 063 2 863 2 802 821 2 719 376 27 165 27 242 26 301 941 29 3 6 r3 12 038 106 562 185 609 251 873 236 708 3 684 7 760 7 556 204 3 721 313 1 203 r524 1 449 255 824 195 999 9 086 42 312 34 514 7 798 8 1 2 3 427 942 776 170 539 25 667 23 316 386 1 229 1 195 34 736 45 259 r112 268 13 925 9 503 674 3 094 2 352 742 654 145 217 257 35 8 238 9 601 936 3 764 3 547 217 2 436 1 845 83 409 41 1 159 153 620 292 328 6 794 2 272 1 523 787 103 633 702 2 297 1 370 254 281 392 61 638 59 24 2 29 3 443 400 134 281 628 Other food stores Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Miscellaneous food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Other apparel and accessory stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places 3 006 477 2 548 615 116 164 256 788 199 008 57 780 84 18 33 27 4 910 925 956 699 330 1 401 154 706 464 64 417 229 243 205 890 23 353 233 082 139 960 (D) 17 586 (D) 84 267 29 420 39 762 14 338 25 424 823 585 259 953 150 89 4 55 152 715 939 498 1 140 894 556 174 50 007 194 385 179 977 14 408 169 749 115 7 22 1 72 12 966 338 424 292 814 098 87 531 83 375 8 692 27 145 23 159 3 986 25 395 16 471 (D) 2 307 (D) 9 516 3 360 5 672 1 640 4 032 106 326 39 311 23 138 14 137 805 8 196 8 324 35 19 6 4 4 553 806 808 361 578 78 180 73 260 8 663 25 452 22 158 3 294 19 889 15 495 977 3 617 198 9 207 1 496 3 761 1 364 2 397 90 556 34 178 19 373 13 077 871 5 425 8 173 28 18 3 2 4 832 351 971 029 481 26 067 12 149 13 918 629 262 217 228 125 84 4 36 411 410 527 474 66 227 347 204 75 41 25 253 993 205 185 870 58 184 228 148 28 22 28 439 633 740 978 088 1 742 239 1 658 626 51 886 93 096 429 825 169 673 1 286 590 1 229 454 58 638 77 245 516 936 702 091 464 775 449 189 14 221 25 983 203 268 304 208 338 666 328 130 16 152 28 114 549 797 245 523 84 143 57 345 14 792 10 552 2 691 2 195 See footnotes at end of table. KS–12 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 5 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 3. Comparative Statistics for the State: 1992 and 1987 For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. Con. Paid employees for pay period including March 12 Percent change 1987 to 1992 19.9 19.9 16.8 44.6 2.2 47.5 24.6 24.1 –4.6 61.8 19.1 17.2 32.0 –25.6 138.3 –2.8 16.5 95.9 13.3 112.0 235.6 17.9 22.6 –14.9 (D) –12.5 (X) 12.2 40.0 –63.1 18.8 63.3 84.8 201.0 54.6 [Includes only establishments with payroll. appendix A] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Establishments SIC code Kind of business 1992 1987 (number) (number) 591 591 pt. 591 pt. 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 5943 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 596 5961 5962 5963 598 5983 5984 5989 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. Drug and proprietary stores Drug stores Proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Stationery stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Nonstore retailers Catalog and mail-order houses Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling establishments Fuel dealers Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. Pet shops Art dealers Other miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 1Includes 2Includes Sales Annual payroll 1992 ($1,000) 518 947 515 356 3 591 1 452 824 230 952 44 973 521 105 42 63 592 498 251 247 1987 ($1,000) 387 879 384 116 3 763 1 010 518 171 012 27 281 370 77 39 37 550 523 982 541 Percent change 1987 to 1992 33.8 34.2 –4.6 43.8 35.1 64.9 40.8 36.1 5.7 68.5 43.9 26.1 49.8 –25.8 155.9 –7.9 31.8 83.3 9.5 63.4 66.1 25.3 31.9 –11.2 (D) 11.7 (X) 21.6 306.4 –60.8 34.5 81.9 116.4 133.9 71.5 1992 ($1,000) 61 610 61 041 569 208 131 10 547 8 349 69 12 5 7 177 976 664 312 1987 ($1,000) 51 389 50 902 487 143 951 10 323 5 662 55 10 5 4 531 459 939 520 1992 (number) 4 691 4 632 59 17 703 1 839 880 7 072 1 195 539 656 1 096 1 292 3 489 130 886 99 1 647 94 633 3 977 2 185 617 1 175 391 44 347 – 1 576 19 25 463 1 461 327 100 1 034 1987 (number) 4 842 4 774 68 16 268 2 090 708 6 860 1 097 630 467 1 190 1 395 3 178 245 476 134 1 540 50 733 2 748 917 652 1 179 553 BB 458 AA 1 614 43 101 460 1 091 271 50 770 476 460 16 3 320 604 224 1 232 237 68 169 134 244 617 37 107 10 340 12 111 312 96 64 152 101 11 90 – 342 8 7 122 368 56 30 282 551 533 18 3 376 779 167 1 239 231 104 127 106 249 653 45 106 26 334 15 127 267 105 57 105 125 22 100 3 347 8 14 121 309 51 20 238 81 723 103 828 230 543 11 93 10 78 5 30 389 220 59 110 056 782 799 569 913 424 720 124 181 415 56 777 82 340 153 910 14 36 11 59 3 27 r132 10 013 17 549 28 639 1 8 1 11 606 611 953 270 944 4 255 290 418 333 539 8 405 14 971 21 696 2 3 2 9 160 613 010 674 482 3 757 r13 893 649 730 632 225 781 238 575 520 47 225 83 735 63 745 (D) 957 (D) 52 1 3 23 58 10 1 45 450 389 542 194 780 918 940 922 74 45 10 18 35 041 532 8 767 15 117 7 616 (D) 6 709 (D) 11 794 200 561 5 751 11 472 1 837 305 9 330 56 624 7 529 49 095 – 63 5 1 31 106 23 4 78 785 645 390 206 937 623 538 776 r43 6 478 605 5 873 – 13 235 280 207 6 832 18 736 3 394 918 14 424 sales from catalog order desks. data for leased departments operated within department stores. Data for this line not included in broader kind-of-business totals. RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–13 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 6 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 4. Summary Statistics for Counties and for Places With 2,500 Inhabitants or More: For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, Kind-of-business groups Paid Building materials and employees garden supplies stores for pay (SIC 52) period including March 12 Sales (number) Number ($1,000) 185 810 1 237 711 526 270 241 29 925 818 107 352 2 366 2 005 144 217 1 240 1 172 68 534 391 143 2 459 236 717 1 170 336 167 105 794 289 287 91 127 133 78 524 473 51 688 626 62 369 219 150 98 2 226 1 069 1 037 120 2 455 78 189 1 902 286 164 1 083 731 213 139 303 7 172 103 60 6 946 63 171 67 2 714 2 525 189 332 2 517 2 396 121 2 378 2 267 111 860 8 5 3 2 2 – 7 6 1 2 17 12 – 5 7 5 2 10 4 6 16 1 4 7 4 1 2 7 2 3 – 2 3 2 3 2 1 6 4 2 7 1 6 2 15 8 5 2 16 – 6 9 1 1 8 2 3 3 4 25 2 – 22 1 3 1 12 10 2 5 12 10 2 8 7 1 908 008 5 163 (D) (D) (D) (D) – 4 110 (D) (D) (D) 10 148 8 630 – 1 518 5 699 (D) (D) 3 809 686 3 123 10 194 (D) 2 618 5 223 (D) (D) (D) 4 692 (D) (D) – (D) 1 739 (D) 2 803 (D) (D) 3 187 (D) (D) 1 702 (D) (D) (D) 8 137 4 301 (D) (D) 16 117 – (D) 14 311 (D) (D) 3 872 (D) 1 988 (D) (D) 30 242 (D) – 29 339 (D) 702 (D) 10 803 (D) (D) 3 156 21 344 (D) (D) 6 707 (D) (D) General merchandise stores (SIC 53) Sales ($1,000) 2 693 222 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – 18 114 18 114 – (D) 36 854 36 854 – – (D) (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) 1 161 (D) – – – 4 159 4 159 – (D) (D) – (D) (D) – – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – 63 674 – – 63 674 – (D) – 46 483 (D) (D) (D) 46 006 46 006 – 41 043 41 043 – Food stores (SIC 54) Sales ($1,000) 3 367 399 16 116 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 16 845 11 006 5 839 6 752 48 597 42 563 (D) (D) 17 690 (D) (D) 11 737 8 032 3 705 59 496 6 568 (D) 28 404 (D) (D) 4 573 15 467 (D) 6 228 (D) 2 302 4 371 2 397 10 777 9 675 1 102 13 685 11 949 1 736 8 331 (D) (D) (D) 44 756 (D) 23 260 (D) 51 862 (D) 4 852 39 752 (D) (D) 17 838 7 596 (D) (D) 8 504 114 714 (D) (D) 109 740 (D) 6 034 2 307 47 365 (D) (D) 7 129 (D) (D) (D) 43 192 41 084 2 108 see [Includes only establishments with payroll. Geographic area Establishments (number) 1 Kansas 16 255 129 77 52 46 40 6 96 83 13 58 237 177 17 43 103 90 13 67 37 30 250 26 58 101 65 20 25 104 30 37 15 22 35 22 70 56 14 81 64 17 61 35 26 23 220 108 89 23 238 10 29 160 39 36 137 74 32 31 36 541 15 11 502 13 30 21 257 222 35 52 233 216 17 219 200 19 Sales ($1,000) 17 566 800 83 546 62 172 21 374 21 367 20 010 1 357 71 332 62 559 8 773 27 895 223 197 9 16 528 146 508 874 Annual payroll ($1,000) 2 022 204 10 496 6 676 3 820 2 124 1 899 225 8 480 7 188 1 292 2 712 26 23 1 1 248 275 175 798 Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) 472 132 2 325 1 537 788 505 444 61 2 049 1 782 267 666 6 336 5 646 292 398 2 570 2 419 151 1 133 710 423 6 109 483 1 861 3 067 698 286 183 1 533 516 615 175 227 265 186 1 038 980 58 1 471 1 342 129 730 435 295 144 5 556 2 770 2 525 261 5 203 194 393 4 168 448 296 2 091 1 382 389 320 637 16 593 172 90 16 232 99 308 66 6 239 5 840 399 624 6 906 6 545 361 6 068 5 888 180 Number 379 3 2 1 1 1 – 5 5 – 2 4 4 – – 2 2 – 3 2 1 3 – 1 2 – 1 1 6 2 3 1 – – – 3 3 – 5 5 – 1 1 – – 8 3 4 1 8 – 2 6 – 1 4 2 1 1 – 9 – – 9 – 1 – 6 5 1 2 5 5 – 5 5 – Number 1 528 7 5 2 4 3 1 14 10 4 10 17 10 4 3 7 6 1 8 4 4 30 4 6 9 11 3 5 17 2 4 3 8 5 3 8 5 3 8 5 3 8 4 4 2 14 7 6 1 27 2 5 13 7 3 13 7 2 4 11 37 3 2 31 1 8 6 17 11 6 7 14 13 1 18 13 5 2 Allen County 3 Iola 4 Balance of county 5 Anderson County 6 Garnett 7 Balance of county 8 Atchison County 9 Atchison 10 Balance of county 11 Barber County 12 Barton County 13 Great Bend 14 Hoisington 15 Balance of county 16 Bourbon County 17 Fort Scott 18 Balance of county 19 Brown County 20 Hiawatha 21 Balance of county 22 Butler County 23 Andover 24 Augusta 25 El Dorado 26 Balance of county 27 Chase County 28 Chautauqua County 29 Cherokee County 30 Baxter Springs 31 Columbus 32 Galena 33 Balance of county 34 Cheyenne County 35 Clark County 36 Clay County 37 Clay Center 38 Balance of county 39 Cloud County 40 Concordia 41 Balance of county 42 Coffey County 43 Burlington 44 Balance of county 45 Comanche County 46 Cowley County 47 Arkansas City 48 Winfield 49 Balance of county 50 Crawford County 51 Frontenac 52 Girard 53 Pittsburg 54 Balance of county 55 Decatur County 56 Dickinson County 57 Abilene 58 Herington (part) 59 Balance of county 60 Doniphan County 61 Douglas County 62 Baldwin City 63 Eudora 64 Lawrence 65 Balance of county 66 Edwards County 67 Elk County 68 Ellis County 69 Hays 70 Balance of county 71 Ellsworth County 72 Finney County 73 Garden City 74 Balance of county 75 Ford County 76 Dodge City 77 Balance of county 93 330 87 436 5 894 41 157 28 263 12 894 251 12 84 116 37 980 988 378 707 907 11 396 10 803 593 4 734 2 700 2 034 26 2 8 13 2 783 279 504 059 941 7 311 9 977 64 21 29 6 7 645 262 058 331 994 1 151 772 6 666 2 288 2 613 767 998 1 148 759 4 494 4 231 263 6 549 5 928 621 3 059 1 823 1 236 629 23 11 10 1 411 950 377 084 12 537 8 694 47 443 44 126 3 317 64 232 57 240 6 992 36 714 21 094 15 620 6 219 212 111 91 10 211 5 19 172 13 386 211 092 083 916 701 849 902 464 23 696 759 1 712 19 217 2 008 1 267 9 6 1 1 147 235 582 330 13 804 96 62 15 18 767 994 629 144 33 414 560 8 4 543 4 481 341 003 573 564 2 806 70 111 696 407 68 555 453 1 121 278 27 084 25 312 1 772 2 685 30 429 28 470 1 959 24 879 24 219 660 10 595 3 660 252 525 233 124 19 401 25 691 274 581 258 017 16 564 232 451 225 483 6 968 KS–14 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 7 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 1992 appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] Kind-of-business groups Automotive dealers (SIC 55 ex. 554) Sales ($1,000) 3 952 958 12 381 9 523 2 858 (D) (D) – 14 250 (D) (D) 8 803 52 373 (D) (D) – (D) (D) – 2 574 (D) (D) 68 646 (D) 33 848 26 845 (D) (D) (D) 13 313 (D) (D) (D) (D) 1 408 (D) 11 412 (D) (D) 14 972 (D) (D) 8 136 (D) (D) (D) 44 662 28 300 (D) (D) 37 120 (D) (D) 28 316 (D) 3 894 30 767 (D) (D) (D) (D) 102 353 (D) (D) 100 244 (D) (D) (D) 52 318 (D) (D) (D) 50 674 49 072 1 602 68 647 (D) (D) Gasoline service stations (SIC 554) Sales ($1,000) 1 401 154 7 851 4 766 3 085 2 597 2 597 – 2 108 (D) (D) 4 038 21 447 13 421 (D) (D) 9 779 (D) (D) 2 500 (D) (D) 34 818 (D) 5 729 12 369 (D) (D) 1 688 8 385 4 578 1 970 (D) (D) 2 181 1 680 7 901 6 629 1 272 4 277 (D) (D) 4 872 (D) (D) 2 207 23 163 12 407 (D) (D) 9 955 1 707 (D) 5 305 (D) 2 231 15 7 4 3 477 387 225 865 Apparel and accessory stores (SIC 56) Sales ($1,000) 706 464 3 221 3 221 – 494 494 – 1 813 1 813 – (D) 7 629 (D) – (D) 1 276 1 276 – (D) (D) (D) 3 381 (D) (D) 2 821 – (D) (D) 463 (D) (D) – (D) (D) (D) 1 089 1 089 – 3 097 3 097 – (D) (D) – (D) 8 905 3 948 4 957 – 6 449 (D) – (D) – (D) 976 (D) (D) – – 31 088 – – 31 088 – (D) – 14 885 (D) (D) (D) 21 901 (D) (D) 10 389 (D) (D) Furniture and homefurnishings stores (SIC 57) Sales ($1,000) 823 585 1 524 1 524 – (D) – (D) 2 750 2 750 – (D) 9 507 6 812 (D) (D) 1 564 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 6 002 459 (D) 4 530 (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) – – (D) 316 1 108 1 108 – 2 381 (D) (D) (D) (D) – – 5 860 4 228 1 632 – 7 685 – (D) (D) (D) 641 1 367 (D) (D) – – 31 943 – – (D) (D) (D) – 12 564 (D) (D) (D) 16 227 16 227 – 9 943 (D) (D) Con. Eating and drinking places (SIC 58) Sales ($1,000) 1 742 239 17 666 6 378 11 288 2 309 (D) (D) 7 248 (D) (D) 1 831 19 726 16 593 1 133 2 000 15 181 14 738 443 3 744 2 600 1 144 22 528 2 407 5 718 11 647 2 756 2 212 641 6 409 2 276 1 980 1 054 1 099 783 408 2 753 (D) (D) 4 402 4 021 381 2 577 1 653 924 1 173 19 309 8 930 9 033 1 346 24 418 (D) 1 190 19 122 (D) 1 084 9 280 7 390 1 286 604 (D) 66 791 (D) (D) 65 301 (D) 1 078 704 24 453 23 820 633 2 707 21 007 19 074 1 933 20 290 (D) (D) Drug and proprietary stores (SIC 591) Sales ($1,000) 518 947 (D) (D) – 1 481 1 481 – (D) (D) (D) 1 718 6 241 4 988 (D) (D) (D) (D) – 2 470 (D) (D) 5 671 (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) 4 285 (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) – 3 285 (D) (D) 1 895 (D) (D) (D) 10 019 (D) (D) (D) 5 123 – (D) (D) (D) (D) 3 293 (D) (D) – (D) 11 286 (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) 5 198 5 198 – (D) 2 701 2 701 – 5 935 (D) (D) Miscellaneous retail stores (SIC 59 ex. 591) Sales ($1,000) 1 452 824 (D) (D) (D) 1 2 3 4 Number 1 198 13 6 7 3 3 – 9 6 3 7 18 16 2 – 5 5 – 5 3 2 24 1 8 10 5 1 1 10 1 5 1 3 5 2 5 4 1 7 5 2 5 4 1 1 19 7 10 2 18 1 3 12 2 4 7 5 1 1 2 32 1 3 24 4 2 1 19 15 4 2 22 19 3 29 28 1 Number 1 422 9 5 4 4 4 – 3 2 1 5 28 17 1 10 10 8 2 5 3 2 34 1 5 11 17 4 3 13 6 4 2 1 5 3 11 7 4 8 7 1 6 3 3 4 25 13 8 4 18 3 1 10 4 3 20 10 4 6 3 36 2 1 31 2 1 – 21 16 5 7 25 24 1 17 15 2 Number 1 281 12 12 – 4 4 – 8 8 – 1 19 18 – 1 5 5 – 2 1 1 12 2 2 8 – 2 1 3 1 1 – 1 2 2 7 7 – 8 8 – 2 2 – 1 24 13 11 – 17 1 – 16 – 1 7 4 3 – – 56 – – 56 – 1 – 28 25 3 2 26 25 1 25 23 2 Number 1 183 6 6 – 1 – 1 5 5 – 2 22 17 1 4 6 5 1 2 1 1 16 3 3 9 1 – 1 3 1 2 – – 2 3 3 3 – 6 5 1 3 3 – – 16 9 7 – 14 – 2 11 1 4 7 5 2 – – 47 – – 45 2 1 – 28 26 2 3 25 25 – 18 17 1 Number 4 608 51 20 31 13 10 3 28 25 3 12 62 42 5 15 44 40 4 18 10 8 64 6 18 25 15 7 5 29 9 8 6 6 8 5 15 10 5 18 14 4 13 7 6 9 58 27 25 6 77 2 6 51 18 7 33 17 7 9 9 146 3 2 139 2 7 9 65 61 4 17 57 51 6 56 52 4 Number 476 1 1 – 3 3 – 2 1 1 3 10 6 3 1 2 2 – 4 3 1 6 1 2 2 1 – 2 5 3 1 1 – 2 1 3 3 – 5 4 1 4 3 1 1 6 2 3 1 7 – 1 5 1 2 6 4 2 – 1 13 1 1 11 – 2 2 4 4 – 2 3 3 – 5 4 1 Number 3 320 19 15 4 11 10 1 15 15 – 14 40 35 1 4 15 12 3 10 6 4 45 7 9 18 11 1 4 11 3 6 1 1 3 1 12 12 – 10 7 3 12 7 5 3 35 19 10 6 36 1 3 27 5 10 32 18 7 7 6 140 3 2 134 1 4 2 57 49 8 5 44 41 3 38 36 2 1 270 5 (D) 6 (D) 7 (D) 8 (D) 9 – 10 1 123 11 11 006 (D) (D) (D) 12 13 14 15 2 813 16 (D) 17 (D) 18 (D) 19 (D) 20 (D) 21 (D) 1 689 (D) (D) (D) 22 23 24 25 26 (D) 27 340 28 2 515 891 (D) (D) (D) 29 30 31 32 33 311 34 (D) 35 (D) 36 (D) 37 – 38 (D) 39 (D) 40 989 41 (D) 42 (D) 43 5 217 44 334 45 (D) 8 147 (D) (D) (D) (D) 439 (D) 1 097 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 1 705 55 (D) (D) 888 3 643 56 57 58 59 1 531 44 642 (D) (D) 40 270 (D) (D) – 18 586 15 931 2 655 3 279 22 267 (D) (D) 15 630 (D) (D) (D) 60 63 748 (D) (D) (D) (D) 61 62 63 64 65 345 66 (D) 67 19 870 68 18 588 69 1 282 70 721 71 (D) 72 (D) 73 (D) 74 10 675 75 (D) 76 (D) 77 RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–15 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 8 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 4. Summary Statistics for Counties and for Places With 2,500 Inhabitants or More: For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, Kind-of-business groups Paid Building materials and employees garden supplies stores for pay (SIC 52) period including March 12 Sales (number) Number ($1,000) 1 264 1 072 192 2 053 1 965 88 164 215 428 EE AA 154 96 366 260 106 94 325 158 167 2 060 175 1 696 189 131 48 508 447 61 349 161 38 338 AA 200 105 1 098 6 072 1 122 1 579 16 4 923 16 583 1 611 744 3 388 FF 155 440 392 48 213 1 583 1 280 303 104 2 904 196 2 371 337 158 193 241 2 683 2 568 115 1 805 277 1 291 237 567 211 356 693 457 8 7 1 4 4 – 2 2 3 3 – 4 2 7 4 3 1 3 1 2 13 3 6 4 1 1 4 2 2 3 3 105 – 1 1 4 14 5 8 – 18 30 3 – 12 9 1 4 2 2 2 12 6 6 2 12 2 6 4 1 3 2 13 13 – 14 3 7 4 7 4 3 10 3 6 578 (D) (D) 6 594 6 594 – (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) 2 689 (D) (D) (D) 825 (D) (D) 12 637 (D) 4 901 (D) (D) (D) 2 467 (D) (D) 760 951 141 831 – (D) (D) 4 326 50 937 3 010 3 440 – 23 636 26 489 (D) – 16 446 (D) (D) 1 301 (D) (D) (D) 7 780 6 778 1 002 (D) 15 058 (D) 7 466 (D) (D) 852 (D) 8 839 8 839 – 10 387 723 5 905 3 759 2 633 1 647 986 6 336 (D) General merchandise stores (SIC 53) Sales ($1,000) (D) (D) (D) 33 189 33 189 – – (D) (D) (D) – – – (D) (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) – – – (D) (D) – 623 (D) 640 624 – – – (D) 87 454 (D) (D) – (D) 352 922 (D) (D) (D) – – 2 762 2 762 – (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) – (D) – (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) 768 (D) (D) (D) (D) Food stores (SIC 54) Sales ($1,000) 35 598 29 042 6 556 (D) (D) (D) (D) 3 885 9 782 9 782 – (D) (D) 7 544 5 499 2 045 (D) 8 292 4 703 3 589 43 1 39 1 457 896 868 693 see [Includes only establishments with payroll. Geographic area Establishments (number) Kansas Con. 1 Franklin County 2 Ottawa 3 Balance of county 4 Geary County 5 Junction City 6 Balance of county 7 Gove County 8 Graham County 9 Grant County 10 Ulysses 11 Balance of county 12 Gray County 13 Greeley County 14 Greenwood County 15 Eureka 16 Balance of county 17 Hamilton County 18 Harper County 19 Anthony 20 Balance of county 21 Harvey County 22 Hesston 23 Newton 24 Balance of county 25 Haskell County 26 Hodgeman County 27 Jackson County 28 Holton 29 Balance of county 30 Jefferson County 31 Jewell County 32 Johnson County 33 Bonner Springs (part) 34 Fairway 35 Gardner 36 Leawood 37 Lenexa 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 Merriam Mission Mission Hills Olathe Overland Park Prairie Village Roeland Park Shawnee Balance of county 114 80 34 201 184 17 27 34 50 49 1 28 18 69 45 24 20 60 32 28 196 18 139 39 22 12 63 47 16 90 36 2 328 1 15 11 61 255 68 153 5 301 1 014 111 16 213 104 22 58 42 16 32 152 100 52 20 269 23 200 46 33 35 36 236 214 22 187 39 106 42 101 34 67 112 55 Sales ($1,000) 112 379 96 465 15 914 171 814 169 090 2 724 15 551 17 315 42 085 (D) (D) 17 067 6 044 26 218 18 991 7 227 6 432 30 471 12 034 18 437 166 14 139 11 223 618 780 825 Annual payroll ($1,000) 11 539 10 024 1 515 20 082 19 661 421 1 245 1 810 4 002 (D) (D) 1 461 867 2 838 2 036 802 615 3 027 1 469 1 558 19 1 16 1 500 792 326 382 997 466 4 700 4 197 503 2 869 1 059 478 043 (D) 2 142 1 057 10 062 87 773 16 029 21 879 121 63 603 200 271 17 163 7 606 40 053 (D) 956 3 611 3 319 292 1 804 14 620 12 288 2 332 691 29 2 23 3 943 759 587 597 964 1 654 2 869 26 800 25 873 927 18 1 14 1 036 991 280 765 Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) 2 691 2 346 345 4 737 4 625 112 307 450 1 011 (D) (D) 331 218 728 518 210 136 741 379 362 4 586 403 3 860 323 267 105 1 100 989 111 644 259 111 494 (D) 522 211 2 322 21 327 3 365 4 554 28 14 715 46 846 4 109 1 899 9 291 (D) 233 897 827 70 438 3 625 3 053 572 168 6 831 611 5 464 756 229 399 653 6 281 6 056 225 4 201 454 3 352 395 1 024 485 539 1 430 1 008 Number 4 3 1 9 9 – – 3 2 2 – – – 1 1 – 1 2 1 1 5 – 5 – – – 2 2 – 3 1 38 – – – 1 5 1 2 – 6 18 1 2 2 – – 3 3 – 1 4 3 1 – 6 – 6 – 2 – 1 5 4 1 5 – 3 2 4 1 3 3 3 Number 20 10 10 6 5 1 3 5 5 5 – 2 1 7 3 4 1 8 3 5 21 4 12 5 5 2 10 5 5 13 3 173 – 2 1 5 15 6 9 – 20 68 14 2 20 11 6 10 4 6 4 20 10 10 4 23 2 17 4 4 9 6 18 15 3 14 2 7 5 12 3 9 17 5 8 973 5 806 51 033 42 750 8 283 33 025 9 109 3 898 096 (D) 8 940 13 543 67 928 563 463 159 166 2 639 1 627 502 521 317 198 097 4 025 (D) 11 205 9 731 1 474 10 891 3 519 585 455 – (D) (D) (D) 47 485 7 545 15 253 – 115 083 158 222 (D) (D) 95 808 32 771 4 355 11 026 9 308 1 718 (D) 28 156 20 143 8 013 3 334 53 586 (D) 50 437 (D) 3 878 10 224 5 529 47 877 47 457 420 33 202 (D) (D) (D) 8 146 (D) (D) 14 444 (D) 118 525 95 278 351 292 (D) 9 419 35 705 31 576 4 129 15 791 126 525 99 121 27 404 6 738 287 42 214 30 399 325 429 645 47 Kearny County 48 Kingman County 49 Kingman 50 Balance of county 51 Kiowa County 52 Labette County 53 Parsons 54 Balance of county 55 Lane County 56 Leavenworth County 57 Lansing 58 Leavenworth 59 Balance of county 60 Lincoln County 61 Linn County 62 Logan County 63 Lyon County 64 Emporia 65 Balance of county 66 McPherson County 67 Lindsborg 68 McPherson 69 Balance of county 70 Marion County 71 Hillsboro 72 Balance of county 73 Marshall County 74 Marysville 9 248 19 216 31 043 231 792 224 610 7 182 170 12 136 20 044 897 759 388 47 345 26 415 20 930 67 958 44 114 4 481 2 195 2 286 6 402 4 339 KS–16 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 9 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 1992 Con. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] Kind-of-business groups Automotive dealers (SIC 55 ex. 554) Sales ($1,000) (D) (D) (D) 39 678 (D) (D) (D) (D) 13 975 (D) (D) 8 167 (D) 3 746 3 746 – 1 819 12 026 1 185 10 841 27 292 (D) (D) (D) 1 042 (D) 12 215 (D) (D) 2 892 500 936 703 – – – (D) (D) 98 596 (D) – 284 525 376 312 – (D) 102 647 (D) (D) 6 208 6 208 – (D) 22 271 21 535 736 (D) 85 405 (D) 51 302 (D) (D) (D) 13 346 41 369 (D) (D) 51 501 (D) 50 725 (D) 12 321 11 535 786 14 148 9 567 Gasoline service stations (SIC 554) Sales ($1,000) 8 626 (D) (D) 19 889 19 889 – 4 056 (D) 2 929 2 929 – 1 800 (D) 5 699 3 619 2 080 (D) 2 609 (D) (D) 24 3 16 4 512 102 850 560 (D) (D) 7 746 (D) (D) 9 400 1 088 186 880 (D) (D) (D) – 26 395 8 999 6 921 (D) 36 401 61 850 10 222 (D) 15 913 (D) – 7 236 6 192 1 044 2 761 19 112 7 987 11 125 – 18 3 10 4 215 282 063 870 (D) 1 999 8 125 26 596 23 291 3 305 18 2 10 6 732 098 270 364 Apparel and accessory stores (SIC 56) Sales ($1,000) 1 256 (D) (D) 1 046 1 046 – – (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) 389 389 – – 1 200 (D) (D) 4 760 – 4 760 – (D) – (D) (D) – – – 192 060 – (D) (D) 1 352 17 336 (D) 14 263 – 3 826 129 191 10 950 (D) 12 230 (D) – – – – (D) 3 752 3 752 – (D) 4 697 – (D) (D) – (D) 549 10 848 10 848 – 2 735 (D) (D) – 778 (D) (D) 1 671 1 671 Furniture and homefurnishings stores (SIC 57) Sales ($1,000) 1 857 (D) (D) 5 721 5 721 – 551 – (D) (D) – – – (D) (D) – (D) – – – 4 552 (D) 3 156 (D) – – 855 855 – (D) 410 289 076 – (D) (D) 5 111 83 228 (D) 6 937 – 24 417 126 632 12 259 – 11 868 (D) – 973 (D) (D) (D) 3 810 3 069 741 (D) 9 857 – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 8 448 (D) (D) 5 802 (D) 3 046 (D) 2 846 974 1 872 1 528 (D) Con. Eating and drinking places (SIC 58) Sales ($1,000) 11 835 10 280 1 555 22 626 21 847 779 833 1 529 3 605 3 605 – 818 269 2 485 1 845 640 1 009 3 032 1 545 1 487 16 1 13 2 767 126 498 143 695 401 2 870 2 674 196 3 300 1 454 338 398 – 2 647 (D) 10 149 43 889 11 283 17 375 – 43 918 157 652 8 356 (D) 32 316 (D) 1 042 2 802 2 444 358 754 13 050 11 809 1 241 377 27 367 1 332 22 350 3 685 790 759 1 694 24 837 23 747 1 090 14 2 10 1 988 762 884 342 Drug and proprietary stores (SIC 591) Sales ($1,000) 3 648 (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 4 486 (D) (D) – (D) – (D) (D) – 697 (D) 111 641 – – (D) (D) 14 146 (D) 5 611 – 10 752 52 430 (D) (D) 14 522 (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) 5 686 3 959 1 727 (D) 7 075 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – 7 377 7 377 – 2 867 (D) (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 69 294 33 2 52 30 5 7 6 1 5 23 16 7 4 57 7 39 11 9 3 3 52 49 3 40 13 21 6 17 6 11 16 11 Miscellaneous retail stores (SIC 59 ex. 591) Sales ($1,000) 6 202 (D) (D) 1 2 3 Number 5 3 2 21 19 2 4 2 5 4 1 4 2 6 6 – 3 8 3 5 15 1 13 1 3 1 10 9 1 7 4 106 – – – 1 5 8 6 – 28 32 – 2 19 5 3 5 5 – 3 13 7 6 1 19 3 13 3 2 3 8 12 11 1 14 2 10 2 6 3 3 13 7 Number 10 7 3 20 20 – 4 2 3 3 – 4 2 10 5 5 2 5 3 2 24 3 15 6 2 1 4 3 1 12 3 135 1 1 3 – 15 8 7 1 27 39 8 2 12 11 – 10 7 3 4 17 11 6 – 27 3 17 7 2 4 4 25 20 5 20 3 10 7 12 4 8 13 4 Number 6 4 2 6 6 – – 1 3 3 – 1 1 5 5 – – 6 5 1 12 – 12 – 2 – 3 3 – – – 249 – 1 2 4 14 2 24 – 11 151 21 3 14 2 – – – – 1 8 8 – 1 16 – 14 2 – 1 4 20 20 – 8 2 6 – 6 2 4 6 6 Number 7 5 2 12 12 – 3 – 1 1 – – – 2 2 – 1 – – – 12 1 9 2 – – 4 4 – 3 4 248 – 1 1 7 50 4 16 – 29 104 11 – 16 9 – 4 3 1 2 10 7 3 2 23 – 22 1 1 2 2 15 14 1 19 1 10 8 8 5 3 4 3 Number 32 23 9 82 71 11 7 11 13 13 – 6 5 20 12 8 6 20 11 9 53 3 36 14 5 5 14 10 4 29 12 595 – 3 1 19 68 24 32 – 85 260 15 2 61 25 6 13 10 3 8 38 28 10 5 80 5 62 13 9 8 6 70 62 8 49 12 29 8 26 4 22 27 12 Number 5 4 1 2 2 – 2 1 2 2 – 2 1 3 2 1 1 2 1 1 5 1 4 – 1 – 1 1 – 4 1 53 – – 1 1 7 2 3 – 8 18 5 1 5 2 1 2 2 – 2 7 4 3 1 6 1 4 1 3 2 – 6 6 – 4 1 3 – 3 2 1 3 1 Number 17 14 3 39 36 3 2 7 13 13 – 5 4 8 5 3 4 6 4 2 36 2 27 7 3 2 11 8 3 16 5 626 – 6 1 19 62 8 46 4 (D) 4 (D) 5 (D) 6 (D) 1 925 7 8 (D) 9 (D) 10 – 11 632 12 244 13 1 255 14 (D) 15 (D) 16 421 17 572 18 (D) 19 (D) 20 (D) (D) (D) (D) 21 22 23 24 210 25 (D) 26 (D) 27 (D) 28 976 29 (D) 30 (D) 31 475 428 32 – 33 (D) 34 (D) 35 (D) 36 (D) 37 (D) 38 15 774 39 (D) 40 (D) 41 185 397 42 11 443 (D) (D) 11 070 43 44 45 46 507 47 (D) 48 (D) 49 (D) 50 633 51 (D) 52 (D) 53 (D) 54 392 55 (D) 1 202 (D) (D) 56 57 58 59 692 60 523 61 533 62 (D) 63 (D) 64 183 65 (D) (D) (D) 917 66 67 68 69 8 642 2 311 6 331 8 596 3 627 3 304 1 001 2 303 4 260 3 122 (D) 70 (D) 71 (D) 72 1 948 73 1 493 74 RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–17 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 10 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 4. Summary Statistics for Counties and for Places With 2,500 Inhabitants or More: For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, Kind-of-business groups Paid Building materials and employees garden supplies stores for pay (SIC 52) period including March 12 Sales (number) Number ($1,000) General merchandise stores (SIC 53) Sales ($1,000) Food stores (SIC 54) Sales ($1,000) see [Includes only establishments with payroll. Geographic area Establishments (number) Kansas Con. Marshall County Con. Balance of county Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) Number Number 1 57 31 122 32 55 35 72 50 22 291 134 109 48 54 – 54 29 96 123 89 34 27 48 41 7 86 29 57 53 37 53 50 3 59 45 14 107 7 38 62 88 79 9 29 419 312 107 55 39 16 77 45 32 394 347 47 60 24 65 47 18 382 369 13 46 45 1 2 558 – 58 29 6 4 23 844 11 263 104 16 51 36 353 591 483 279 2 063 1 164 10 1 5 3 882 951 462 469 422 316 2 412 448 1 234 730 1 114 1 025 89 6 264 2 943 2 809 512 667 – 667 417 1 149 2 417 2 033 384 239 801 665 136 1 211 551 660 562 341 982 (D) (D) 829 765 64 2 025 222 648 1 155 2 162 2 054 108 224 12 429 10 979 1 450 623 555 68 1 022 704 318 11 021 9 546 1 475 498 190 940 753 187 13 001 12 736 265 654 (D) (D) 100 131 – 2 065 371 145 418 236 140 1 118 195 640 283 496 419 77 2 612 1 260 1 088 264 383 – 383 206 589 962 805 157 111 370 289 81 584 252 332 295 163 385 EE AA 412 366 46 852 71 345 436 833 777 56 126 4 808 4 132 676 315 257 58 510 342 168 5 436 4 606 830 276 109 506 418 88 5 067 4 955 112 312 EE AA 36 206 – 841 177 76 206 7 3 7 3 2 2 8 4 4 14 6 5 3 6 – 6 1 6 9 4 5 – 3 2 1 5 2 3 5 2 2 2 – 5 2 3 8 – 2 6 6 6 – 3 17 11 6 4 4 – 6 5 1 11 7 4 5 1 3 2 1 12 11 1 2 2 – 106 – 3 1 – – (D) (D) 5 797 1 923 (D) (D) 3 662 2 571 1 091 8 920 (D) 4 950 (D) 2 634 – 2 634 (D) 4 007 4 715 1 996 2 719 – 1 618 (D) (D) 3 307 (D) (D) 2 166 (D) (D) (D) – 1 786 (D) (D) 5 604 – (D) (D) 4 504 4 504 – 482 22 899 (D) (D) 2 669 2 669 – 1 766 (D) (D) 10 632 (D) (D) 2 035 (D) (D) (D) (D) 30 140 (D) (D) (D) (D) – 216 461 – (D) (D) – – – 1 2 1 1 – 2 2 – 9 5 2 2 1 – 1 2 3 3 3 – – 2 2 – 1 1 – 1 1 2 2 – 2 2 – 3 – 1 2 3 3 – 2 14 11 3 3 2 1 1 1 – 8 8 – 2 – 2 2 – 8 8 – 2 2 – 46 – 3 1 – 1 – (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) – 43 521 (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) 1 150 (D) (D) – – (D) (D) – (D) (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) – 553 – (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) 75 612 (D) (D) 1 700 (D) (D) (D) (D) – 74 075 74 075 – (D) – (D) (D) – 82 184 82 184 – (D) (D) – (D) – (D) (D) – (D) 12 6 13 3 5 5 9 4 5 34 12 13 9 9 – 9 6 13 11 7 4 3 5 3 2 11 2 9 9 4 3 3 – 8 4 4 15 – 4 11 10 6 4 2 35 18 17 4 2 2 8 4 4 33 26 7 5 7 8 4 4 28 27 1 2 2 – 198 – 6 3 – 1 (D) 5 367 29 751 5 397 (D) (D) 10 008 (D) (D) 64 24 31 8 048 163 378 507 – 7 292 4 753 17 740 19 107 16 317 2 790 (D) 9 198 (D) (D) 14 084 (D) (D) 7 591 (D) (D) (D) – 11 964 10 696 1 268 12 983 – 7 468 5 515 20 694 (D) (D) (D) 87 901 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 9 227 (D) (D) 75 154 72 469 2 685 5 244 2 971 12 025 (D) (D) 83 576 (D) (D) (D) (D) – 665 076 – 31 447 (D) – (D) 2 Meade County 3 Miami County 4 Osawatomie 5 Paola 6 Balance of county 7 Mitchell County 8 Beloit 9 Balance of county 10 Montgomery County 11 Coffeyville 12 Independence 13 Balance of county 14 Morris County 15 Herington (part) 16 Balance of county 17 Morton County 18 Nemaha County 19 Neosho County 20 Chanute 21 Balance of county 22 Ness County 23 Norton County 24 Norton 25 Balance of county 26 Osage County 27 Osage City 28 Balance of county 29 Osborne County 30 Ottawa County 31 Pawnee County 32 Larned 33 Balance of county 34 Phillips County 35 Phillipsburg 36 Balance of county 37 Pottawatomie County 38 Manhattan (part) 39 Wamego 40 Balance of county 41 Pratt County 42 Pratt 43 Balance of county 44 Rawlins County 45 Reno County 46 Hutchinson 47 Balance of county 48 Republic County 49 Belleville 50 Balance of county 51 Rice County 52 Lyons 53 Balance of county 54 Riley County 55 Manhattan (part) 56 Balance of county 57 Rooks County 58 Rush County 59 Russell County 60 Russell 61 Balance of county 62 Saline County 63 Salina 64 Balance of county 65 Scott County 66 Scott City 67 Balance of county 68 Sedgwick County 69 Bel Aire 70 Derby 71 Haysville 72 Mulvane (part) 73 Park City 47 630 42 785 4 845 242 104 118 19 899 165 779 955 4 816 4 441 375 26 12 12 2 530 350 111 069 28 781 – 28 781 15 026 54 074 98 831 84 667 14 164 11 546 30 051 25 705 4 346 53 596 23 418 30 178 23 576 17 396 36 281 (D) (D) 35 080 32 388 2 692 62 14 23 23 348 656 974 718 2 804 – 2 804 1 667 4 793 10 385 8 847 1 538 977 3 056 2 530 526 5 382 2 398 2 984 2 271 1 393 4 270 (D) (D) 3 324 3 064 260 8 705 928 2 803 4 974 9 383 8 965 418 1 071 53 796 47 457 6 339 2 628 2 320 308 4 272 2 966 1 306 47 889 41 829 6 060 2 145 835 3 891 3 240 651 55 512 54 233 1 279 3 006 (D) (D) 427 961 – 9 860 1 740 637 1 884 7 292 73 572 70 400 3 172 11 951 452 069 395 730 56 339 23 946 19 556 4 390 35 802 25 456 10 346 422 799 365 684 57 115 20 821 8 457 41 320 33 957 7 363 480 821 472 414 8 407 28 337 (D) (D) 3 661 203 – 86 661 14 308 6 680 19 361 KS–18 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 11 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 1992 Con. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] Kind-of-business groups Automotive dealers (SIC 55 ex. 554) Sales ($1,000) Gasoline service stations (SIC 554) Sales ($1,000) Apparel and accessory stores (SIC 56) Sales ($1,000) Furniture and homefurnishings stores (SIC 57) Sales ($1,000) Con. Eating and drinking places (SIC 58) Sales ($1,000) Drug and proprietary stores (SIC 591) Sales ($1,000) Miscellaneous retail stores (SIC 59 ex. 591) Sales ($1,000) Number Number Number Number Number Number Number 6 3 14 4 6 4 5 5 – 25 12 10 3 5 – 5 2 13 12 8 4 3 7 6 1 12 5 7 5 3 9 8 1 3 3 – 8 1 4 3 7 7 – 4 30 18 12 5 5 – 6 5 1 29 24 5 4 – 8 5 3 28 28 – 5 5 – 149 – 5 2 1 1 4 581 (D) 22 720 (D) 3 408 (D) 15 619 15 619 – 49 840 11 255 37 629 956 9 587 – 9 587 (D) 16 214 26 607 23 542 3 065 904 4 822 (D) (D) 17 550 10 044 7 506 3 743 (D) 12 036 (D) (D) (D) (D) – 14 100 (D) (D) (D) 14 588 14 588 – (D) 114 648 95 888 18 760 3 064 3 064 – (D) (D) (D) 101 628 (D) (D) 2 389 – 7 145 4 757 2 388 86 771 86 771 – 7 213 7 213 – 849 286 – 1 609 (D) (D) (D) 9 1 12 2 6 4 6 4 2 29 14 8 7 5 – 5 4 5 15 11 4 5 6 6 – 11 3 8 6 6 4 4 – 6 4 2 11 2 3 6 5 5 – 6 36 30 6 8 3 5 11 4 7 29 23 6 8 4 10 6 4 39 36 3 4 4 – 163 – 8 4 2 1 4 969 (D) 9 850 (D) 4 706 (D) 6 210 (D) (D) 15 7 3 4 622 386 865 371 – – 7 1 6 – 3 3 – 17 9 8 – 4 – 4 1 9 6 6 – 1 5 5 – 2 1 1 5 2 5 5 – 4 4 – 6 2 3 1 9 8 1 1 32 31 1 4 4 – 2 2 – 47 46 1 2 – 2 2 – 31 31 – 3 3 – 233 – 1 2 – – – – 1 340 (D) (D) – 749 749 – 7 268 4 253 3 015 – 436 – 436 (D) 1 091 2 917 2 917 – (D) 1 001 1 001 – (D) (D) (D) 450 (D) 385 385 – 729 729 – 2 645 (D) (D) (D) 3 053 (D) (D) (D) 20 960 (D) (D) 546 546 – (D) (D) – 31 961 (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) – 22 809 22 809 – 574 574 – 163 068 – (D) (D) – – 1 3 7 2 3 2 7 5 2 21 10 9 2 4 – 4 – 5 11 8 3 2 4 4 – 4 2 2 2 1 3 3 – 7 7 – 9 2 3 4 5 5 – 1 39 30 9 6 5 1 5 2 3 29 28 1 5 – 4 4 – 36 35 1 5 5 – 168 – 3 – – – (D) (D) 2 279 (D) (D) (D) 1 824 (D) (D) 8 195 (D) 3 884 (D) 660 – 660 – 1 065 3 865 (D) (D) (D) 840 840 – 1 348 (D) (D) (D) (D) 1 338 1 338 – 1 991 1 991 – 9 935 (D) (D) (D) 754 754 – (D) 14 485 10 372 4 113 1 078 (D) (D) 1 034 (D) (D) 15 519 (D) (D) 1 209 – 1 072 1 072 – 18 939 (D) (D) 1 435 1 435 – 163 942 – (D) – – – 15 8 33 5 16 12 15 10 5 77 36 29 12 11 – 11 8 20 33 23 10 6 8 5 3 24 7 17 10 12 15 13 2 12 7 5 31 – 9 22 26 22 4 7 122 89 33 9 5 4 23 12 11 108 95 13 14 8 16 13 3 104 101 3 13 13 – 876 – 18 8 3 – 1 138 1 031 9 081 2 124 4 378 2 579 3 449 2 778 671 22 11 9 1 674 681 032 961 – 2 611 1 582 3 636 7 252 5 894 1 358 659 2 055 1 668 387 4 090 1 863 2 227 1 408 1 159 3 687 (D) (D) 1 946 1 498 448 5 251 – 2 640 2 611 8 002 7 503 499 951 41 759 36 373 5 386 2 144 1 792 352 4 212 2 812 1 400 53 569 (D) (D) 1 543 547 3 833 (D) (D) 44 966 43 315 1 651 2 795 2 795 – 412 672 – 8 249 2 053 (D) – 2 1 6 2 3 1 3 2 1 13 6 6 1 1 – 1 1 5 4 3 1 1 2 2 – 5 2 3 2 2 2 2 – 2 2 – 3 – 1 2 3 3 – 1 11 10 1 1 1 – 4 2 2 7 6 1 2 1 3 3 – 5 5 – 2 2 – 58 – 2 1 – – (D) (D) 6 687 (D) 4 937 (D) (D) (D) (D) 8 039 4 066 (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) 3 475 3 653 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – 2 224 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) – 1 777 – (D) (D) 1 924 1 924 – (D) 14 451 (D) (D) (D) (D) – 1 980 (D) (D) 6 642 (D) (D) (D) (D) 2 027 2 027 – 8 792 8 792 – (D) (D) – 75 973 – (D) (D) – – 5 5 21 9 7 5 14 11 3 52 24 19 9 8 – 8 4 17 19 16 3 6 6 6 – 11 4 7 8 4 8 8 – 10 10 – 13 – 8 5 14 14 – 2 83 64 19 11 8 3 11 8 3 93 84 9 13 3 9 6 3 91 87 4 8 7 1 561 – 9 7 – – 455 214 (D) 1 313 (D) (D) 2 347 1 782 565 14 772 (D) (D) (D) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 2 861 – 2 861 486 2 588 8 254 6 103 2 151 2 954 2 741 2 741 – 7 338 2 414 4 924 4 316 (D) 2 559 2 559 – 3 567 (D) (D) 7 430 (D) 2 846 (D) 3 796 3 796 – 3 171 31 791 25 738 6 053 4 648 2 141 2 507 6 157 3 168 2 989 22 773 (D) (D) 4 004 1 855 7 581 4 418 3 163 63 700 (D) (D) 3 059 3 059 – 198 991 – 8 092 3 750 (D) (D) 2 611 (D) 14 – 15 (D) 16 1 104 17 3 108 18 (D) 19 (D) 20 204 21 1 815 22 1 033 23 1 033 24 – 25 2 872 26 1 473 27 1 399 28 1 447 29 360 30 931 31 931 32 – 33 2 705 34 2 705 35 – 36 2 070 – 1 544 526 37 38 39 40 (D) 41 (D) 42 – 43 (D) 44 27 563 45 22 647 46 4 916 47 1 477 48 1 264 49 213 50 (D) 51 (D) 52 (D) 53 30 846 54 (D) 55 (D) 56 2 031 57 (D) 58 (D) 59 (D) 60 (D) 61 38 944 62 (D) 63 (D) 64 (D) 65 (D) 66 (D) 67 (D) 68 – 69 (D) 70 (D) 71 – 72 – 73 RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–19 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 12 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 4. Summary Statistics for Counties and for Places With 2,500 Inhabitants or More: For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, Kind-of-business groups Paid Building materials and employees garden supplies stores for pay (SIC 52) period including March 12 Sales (number) Number ($1,000) General merchandise stores (SIC 53) Sales ($1,000) Food stores (SIC 54) Sales ($1,000) see [Includes only establishments with payroll. Geographic area Establishments (number) Kansas Con. Sedgwick County Con. Valley Center Wichita Balance of county Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) Number Number 1 2 3 17 2 221 223 171 168 3 1 060 989 71 22 74 70 4 53 28 9 31 30 1 131 13 64 54 89 76 13 32 39 16 61 23 62 34 20 8 27 734 36 12 681 5 12 114 3 346 942 175 137 193 266 192 696 570 1 361 191 1 317 247 43 944 9 452 59 830 (D) (D) 21 589 10 465 1 358 15 758 (D) (D) 105 10 63 32 969 251 207 511 1 650 390 800 21 390 20 254 20 198 56 160 385 154 800 5 585 893 6 253 (D) (D) 2 212 1 363 206 1 359 (D) (D) 10 1 6 2 452 232 733 487 384 91 999 4 749 4 721 4 712 9 36 771 35 457 1 314 214 1 498 (D) (D) 551 335 49 344 (D) (D) 2 446 304 1 548 594 1 910 1 786 124 427 373 147 495 208 620 258 273 89 292 21 760 (D) 282 20 054 (D) 178 32 875 1 853 1 969 1 961 8 14 270 13 722 548 107 625 FF BB 294 150 23 167 CC AA 1 081 113 693 275 856 784 72 200 164 61 339 104 322 144 129 49 135 8 347 FF 103 7 629 BB 1 86 15 11 11 – 41 35 6 2 7 7 – 2 1 – 1 1 – 8 1 2 5 5 4 1 2 6 2 6 2 7 5 1 1 2 34 2 1 29 2 (D) 185 848 (D) 4 787 4 787 – 75 701 71 530 4 171 (D) 3 628 3 628 – (D) (D) – (D) (D) – 6 039 (D) (D) 5 502 3 274 (D) (D) (D) 2 948 (D) 1 924 (D) 1 894 (D) (D) (D) (D) 39 372 (D) (D) 35 536 (D) – 39 2 3 3 – 21 21 – 1 3 3 – 2 – – 1 1 – 3 – 3 – 3 3 – 1 – 1 2 – 2 – 1 1 – 16 2 – 14 – – 572 342 (D) (D) (D) – 265 660 265 660 – (D) 7 300 7 300 – (D) – – (D) (D) – (D) – (D) – (D) (D) – (D) – (D) (D) – (D) – (D) (D) – 105 499 (D) – (D) – 2 163 23 9 8 1 81 77 4 4 5 5 – 8 4 – 5 4 1 15 2 4 9 12 10 2 4 5 2 10 3 4 1 3 – 5 90 5 3 81 1 (D) 591 120 (D) 34 998 (D) (D) 206 648 202 105 4 543 3 793 (D) (D) – 6 734 4 466 – 5 622 (D) (D) 31 724 (D) (D) (D) 13 359 (D) (D) 3 730 2 570 (D) 5 746 (D) (D) (D) 4 165 – 3 424 182 870 (D) 3 324 164 806 (D) 4 Seward County 5 Liberal 6 Balance of county 7 Shawnee County 8 Topeka 9 Balance of county 10 Sheridan County 11 Sherman County 12 Goodland 13 Balance of county 14 Smith County 15 Stafford County 16 Stanton County 17 Stevens County 18 Hugoton 19 Balance of county 20 Sumner County 21 Mulvane (part) 22 Wellington 23 Balance of county 24 Thomas County 25 Colby 26 Balance of county 27 Trego County 28 Wabaunsee County 29 Wallace County 30 Washington County 31 Wichita County 32 Wilson County 33 Fredonia 34 Neodesha 35 Balance of county 36 Woodson County 37 Wyandotte County 38 Bonner Springs (part) 39 Edwardsville 40 Kansas City 41 Balance of county 76 339 71 737 4 602 23 216 15 772 6 796 21 543 12 423 25 12 9 2 530 622 989 919 8 396 7 810 586 1 916 1 565 624 2 090 908 2 717 1 205 1 150 362 1 201 91 537 (D) 1 273 84 123 (D) 10 084 786 348 (D) 10 760 716 000 (D) KS–20 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 13 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 1992 Con. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] Kind-of-business groups Automotive dealers (SIC 55 ex. 554) Sales ($1,000) Gasoline service stations (SIC 554) Sales ($1,000) Apparel and accessory stores (SIC 56) Sales ($1,000) Furniture and homefurnishings stores (SIC 57) Sales ($1,000) Con. Eating and drinking places (SIC 58) Sales ($1,000) Drug and proprietary stores (SIC 591) Sales ($1,000) Miscellaneous retail stores (SIC 59 ex. 591) Sales ($1,000) Number Number Number Number Number Number Number 1 128 11 18 18 – 72 68 4 2 7 6 1 7 – 1 2 2 – 9 1 4 4 5 4 1 5 3 3 5 4 5 2 2 1 2 58 5 – 53 – (D) 812 614 (D) 48 891 48 891 – 278 776 275 230 3 546 (D) 14 277 (D) (D) 5 013 – (D) (D) (D) – 13 162 (D) (D) (D) 11 590 (D) (D) (D) 605 2 469 1 064 (D) 1 701 (D) (D) (D) (D) 161 715 (D) – (D) – 5 121 22 16 16 – 88 76 12 3 9 9 – 4 5 – 2 2 – 20 2 8 10 13 8 5 5 7 1 11 3 5 2 2 1 3 60 2 2 56 – 3 630 149 400 (D) 17 206 17 206 – 116 076 102 645 13 431 733 9 062 9 062 – 1 680 2 522 – (D) (D) – 22 490 (D) 8 356 (D) 8 246 6 325 1 921 (D) 6 889 (D) 7 457 2 268 4 646 (D) (D) (D) 2 555 80 297 (D) (D) 74 715 – – 211 19 17 17 – 97 95 2 1 8 8 – 3 – 1 3 3 – 4 – 4 – 14 14 – 2 – 1 – 2 4 3 1 – – 37 – – 37 – – 154 136 (D) 13 561 13 561 – 49 189 (D) (D) (D) 2 975 2 975 – 313 – (D) 297 297 – 1 020 – 1 020 – 8 572 8 572 – (D) – (D) – (D) 698 (D) (D) – – 15 394 – – 15 394 – – 157 8 13 13 – 75 74 1 3 6 5 1 3 1 – 1 1 – 9 2 5 2 6 6 – 1 1 – 3 – 5 4 1 – 2 28 – 1 27 – – 160 330 (D) 9 120 9 120 – 72 981 (D) (D) (D) 2 579 (D) (D) 912 (D) – (D) (D) – 3 199 (D) 2 345 (D) 1 463 1 463 – (D) (D) – (D) – 526 (D) (D) – (D) 17 715 – (D) (D) – 7 768 72 41 41 – 311 289 22 2 15 14 1 12 12 4 11 11 – 41 3 23 15 17 15 2 6 6 2 17 3 16 8 5 3 7 234 15 2 216 1 1 513 372 402 (D) 16 119 16 119 – 140 371 134 314 6 057 (D) 5 005 (D) (D) 1 633 1 801 481 3 011 3 011 – 7 771 (D) 5 349 (D) 8 178 (D) (D) 947 746 (D) 2 630 281 2 388 1 109 879 400 880 89 327 (D) (D) 83 366 (D) 1 51 3 4 4 – 29 28 1 1 3 3 – 3 2 1 2 2 – 5 1 2 2 1 1 – 2 1 – 1 1 4 3 1 – 1 31 2 1 28 – (D) 69 778 1 920 3 893 3 893 – 54 547 (D) (D) (D) 2 433 2 433 – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – 3 084 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – (D) (D) – (D) (D) 3 544 (D) (D) – (D) 32 597 (D) (D) (D) – – 497 48 39 37 2 245 226 19 3 11 10 1 9 3 2 3 3 – 17 1 9 7 13 11 2 4 10 4 6 5 10 6 3 1 5 146 3 2 140 1 – 278 972 26 049 1 2 3 (D) 4 (D) 5 (D) 6 101 242 91 769 9 473 7 8 9 (D) 10 (D) 11 (D) 12 (D) 13 1 566 14 294 15 (D) 16 (D) 17 (D) 18 – 19 (D) (D) (D) (D) 20 21 22 23 4 400 24 (D) 25 (D) 26 (D) 27 (D) 28 381 29 511 30 1 309 31 (D) (D) 591 (D) 32 33 34 35 646 36 61 562 37 (D) 38 (D) 39 (D) 40 (D) 41 RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–21 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 14 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 5. Summary Statistics for Places With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) KANSAS CITY Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores 681 29 11 9 7 2 14 7 7 6 1 81 56 7 12 6 53 8 13 26 6 56 37 3 11 9 2 5 13 5 27 6 8 – 13 216 176 50 1 104 21 40 28 140 29 14 38 6 5 7 20 716 000 35 536 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 164 806 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 18 864 (D) 7 057 74 715 15 394 (D) 4 611 (D) (D) 4 485 (D) (D) (D) (D) 3 895 – 9 399 83 366 77 451 15 786 (D) 53 273 (D) 5 915 (D) (D) 16 384 5 955 12 518 (D) (D) (D) 3 758 84 123 3 989 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (NA) (D) (D) (D) 15 138 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 1 498 (D) 610 3 719 2 062 (D) 500 (D) (D) 686 (D) (D) (D) (D) 1 333 – 916 21 402 20 730 4 878 (D) 13 652 (D) 672 (D) (D) 780 1 641 1 967 (D) (D) (D) 674 20 054 864 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (NA) (D) (D) (D) 3 424 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 412 (D) 132 914 617 (D) 129 (D) (D) 269 (D) (D) (D) (D) 298 – 185 5 196 5 026 1 157 (D) 3 309 (D) 170 (D) (D) 179 375 503 (D) (D) (D) 169 7 629 269 CC BB BB AA FF (NA) FF BB AA 1 398 GG BB BB BB FF EE 77 CC 31 289 269 BB 63 BB AA 115 BB AA CC BB 64 – 63 2 749 2 665 648 BB 1 827 CC 84 CC FF 95 148 205 BB BB BB 114 Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. See footnotes at end of table. 19 1 13 – – 12 14 15 484 (D) (D) – – 2 128 (D) 2 754 (D) (D) – – 403 (D) 650 (D) (D) – – 106 (D) 125 AA BB – – 32 BB KS–22 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 15 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 5. Summary Statistics for Places With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) LAWRENCE Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores 502 22 7 8 4 3 9 4 4 1 4 31 18 1 6 6 24 8 6 8 2 31 56 5 20 17 3 12 11 8 45 8 17 5 15 139 120 54 2 55 9 19 11 134 21 13 54 9 9 8 28 543 573 29 339 (D) (D) 1 722 4 948 63 674 59 600 58 649 (D) (D) 109 740 (D) (D) (D) 1 879 100 244 90 333 (D) 5 893 (D) 40 270 31 088 2 880 9 992 8 927 1 065 8 035 7 373 2 808 (D) (D) 9 364 3 775 (D) 65 301 60 870 25 414 (D) 30 648 (D) 4 431 (D) (D) 11 568 2 552 (D) 3 042 14 646 2 697 (D) 68 555 3 118 (D) (D) 326 441 6 245 (NA) 5 598 (D) (D) 11 616 (D) (D) (D) 335 8 784 7 242 (D) 1 127 (D) 2 344 3 938 279 1 361 1 196 165 977 829 492 (D) (D) 1 736 264 (D) 18 250 17 462 8 178 (D) 7 737 (D) 788 (D) (D) 562 297 (D) 522 1 628 651 (D) 16 232 667 (D) (D) 68 78 1 488 (NA) 1 336 (D) (D) 2 906 (D) (D) (D) 71 2 215 1 839 (D) 299 (D) 555 816 70 265 224 41 223 186 72 (D) (D) 455 56 (D) 4 115 3 931 1 865 (D) 1 673 (D) 184 (D) (D) 122 74 (D) 105 442 157 (D) 6 946 209 BB BB 53 17 599 (NA) 533 AA BB 800 FF AA BB 49 407 316 AA 70 AA 240 426 37 133 116 17 123 82 51 EE BB 123 22 CC 2 920 2 728 1 189 CC 1 294 BB 192 CC FF 102 47 EE 47 153 58 CC Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. See footnotes at end of table. 14 1 7 1 – 5 18 (D) (D) (D) (D) – 623 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – 113 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) – 38 (D) CC AA BB AA – 8 BB RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–23 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 16 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 5. Summary Statistics for Places With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) MANHATTAN Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores 354 7 4 1 1 1 8 4 4 2 2 26 14 – 4 8 25 7 2 12 4 25 48 5 20 17 3 7 10 6 30 10 7 3 10 95 85 26 4 49 6 10 6 84 17 5 40 9 4 11 16 41 13 1 25 380 340 (D) 4 082 (D) (D) (D) 74 075 68 570 67 712 (D) (D) 72 469 69 758 – 665 2 046 77 238 66 547 (D) 7 099 (D) 21 274 32 349 2 146 9 290 (D) (D) 12 280 4 182 4 451 17 696 5 819 (D) (D) 5 566 (D) 003 076 467 926 534 (D) (D) (D) 6 202 1 101 13 2 1 3 5 223 152 801 692 578 42 757 (D) 407 (D) (D) (D) 7 233 (NA) 6 438 (D) (D) 5 361 4 914 – 170 277 6 040 4 376 (D) 1 281 (D) 1 469 3 795 194 1 005 (D) (D) 1 387 497 712 2 155 640 (D) (D) 728 (D) 10 849 3 426 391 6 854 178 (D) (D) (D) 308 189 1 810 306 122 625 757 9 768 (D) 80 (D) (D) (D) 1 716 (NA) 1 547 (D) (D) 1 282 1 194 – 36 52 1 326 948 (D) 300 (D) 336 860 48 243 (D) (D) 298 126 145 505 149 (D) (D) 189 (D) 2 438 744 88 1 582 24 (D) (D) (D) 70 16 428 65 29 162 172 4 677 BB 23 BB AA AA 693 (NA) 613 AA BB 457 383 – 34 40 292 190 AA 80 AA 163 481 28 162 CC AA 144 59 88 185 46 BB AA 80 GG 1 718 580 60 1 052 26 CC BB EE 56 15 232 35 26 59 112 Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. See footnotes at end of table. 4 – 4 – – 5 9 (D) – 1 586 – – 701 (D) (D) – 303 – – 144 (D) (D) – 76 – – 36 (D) BB – 39 – – 14 BB KS–24 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 17 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 5. Summary Statistics for Places With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) OVERLAND PARK Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores 1 014 30 17 6 7 – 18 12 12 2 4 68 35 3 16 14 32 14 3 14 1 39 151 21 62 46 16 13 31 24 104 24 37 6 37 260 248 102 7 113 26 12 18 294 25 8 154 32 15 30 77 1 627 097 26 489 19 653 2 655 4 181 – 352 922 (D) (D) (D) (D) 158 222 146 3 4 4 197 112 657 256 200 271 4 024 2 605 380 1 039 – 38 220 (NA) (D) (D) (D) 18 710 16 105 376 1 646 583 28 948 25 806 (D) (D) (D) 3 703 13 826 2 132 5 993 3 943 2 050 2 150 2 230 1 321 12 329 2 606 3 618 803 5 302 47 649 46 29 1 13 2 898 087 944 651 216 751 6 594 26 268 382 329 15 3 1 4 6 092 035 381 241 435 46 846 862 570 88 204 – 8 837 (NA) (D) (D) (D) 4 570 4 004 80 352 134 6 467 5 692 (D) (D) (D) 932 3 407 503 1 571 928 643 451 561 321 2 874 645 790 207 1 232 11 336 11 143 7 022 539 3 086 496 193 1 423 6 138 90 72 3 524 656 343 1 073 1 452 16 583 291 190 29 72 – 2 703 (NA) HH AA BB 1 634 1 341 15 200 78 933 754 AA CC AA 305 1 530 176 734 601 133 272 195 153 790 161 244 58 327 5 903 5 804 3 404 241 1 966 193 99 447 2 047 74 28 1 270 250 162 208 650 376 312 354 140 (D) (D) (D) 61 850 129 191 16 588 50 835 40 711 10 124 30 249 19 581 11 938 126 632 21 23 4 76 476 559 837 760 157 652 154 88 6 53 5 299 551 545 339 864 3 353 52 430 185 397 9 626 2 685 122 24 13 24 59 238 650 799 034 755 Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. See footnotes at end of table. 25 1 20 1 – 23 37 26 044 (D) 4 422 (D) – 8 366 (D) 6 091 (D) 901 (D) – 1 706 (D) 1 460 (D) 223 (D) – 409 (D) 338 AA 92 AA – 102 CC RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–25 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 18 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 5. Summary Statistics for Places With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) SALINA Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores 369 11 4 1 3 3 8 4 4 1 3 27 13 1 5 8 28 7 9 9 3 36 31 4 10 8 2 6 9 2 35 9 4 7 15 101 85 33 2 43 7 16 5 87 13 5 40 9 6 6 19 472 414 (D) 21 168 (D) 3 922 (D) 82 184 68 118 66 919 (D) (D) (D) 80 838 (D) (D) (D) 86 771 74 135 (D) 6 434 (D) (D) 22 809 (D) 5 978 (D) (D) 11 198 4 033 (D) (D) (D) 853 3 091 10 419 43 315 41 159 (D) (D) (D) (D) 2 156 8 792 (D) 4 907 811 (D) 2 978 (D) (D) (D) 54 233 (D) 1 743 (D) 716 (D) 8 159 (NA) 6 513 (D) (D) (D) 7 707 (D) (D) (D) 7 480 5 968 (D) 1 075 (D) (D) 2 560 (D) 690 (D) (D) 1 250 475 (D) (D) (D) 141 418 1 360 12 265 11 772 (D) (D) (D) (D) 493 1 375 (D) 298 171 (D) 394 (D) (D) (D) 12 736 (D) 397 (D) 149 (D) 1 987 (NA) 1 604 (D) (D) (D) 1 850 (D) (D) (D) 1 715 1 354 (D) 257 (D) (D) 655 (D) 170 (D) (D) 331 120 (D) (D) (D) 28 101 310 2 904 2 768 (D) (D) (D) (D) 136 291 (D) 68 38 (D) 71 (D) (D) (D) 4 955 CC 119 BB 42 AA 729 (NA) 581 AA CC FF 506 AA BB BB 321 210 BB 80 AA EE 283 AA 86 BB AA 125 51 AA CC BB 14 30 82 1 766 1 693 FF BB FF CC 73 86 EE 50 20 CC 31 BB BB BB Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. See footnotes at end of table. 8 2 4 – – 4 11 (D) (D) 1 165 – – (D) (D) (D) (D) 245 – – (D) (D) (D) (D) 63 – – (D) (D) BB AA 21 – – AA BB KS–26 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 19 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 5. Summary Statistics for Places With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) TOPEKA Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 58 5812 5812 5812 5812 5812 5813 591 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.)1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.)1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores 989 35 19 11 5 – 21 12 12 6 3 77 51 3 9 14 68 12 21 28 7 76 95 5 40 33 7 9 29 12 74 16 24 6 28 289 243 94 8 121 20 46 28 226 42 24 90 13 8 18 51 1 317 247 71 530 (D) 7 476 (D) – 265 660 r234 154 800 9 402 (D) 1 228 (D) – 25 031 (NA) (D) (D) (D) 20 510 (D) (D) (D) (D) 23 186 18 343 504 (D) (D) 6 121 (D) 537 (D) (D) 309 1 376 1 569 428 (D) (D) 1 454 356 4 424 35 146 33 15 1 15 1 693 688 196 746 063 35 457 2 038 (D) 280 (D) – 5 714 (NA) (D) (D) (D) 5 003 (D) (D) (D) (D) 5 236 4 070 124 (D) (D) 1 311 (D) 142 (D) (D) 72 427 376 110 (D) (D) 347 91 956 7 848 7 486 3 569 326 3 349 242 362 (D) 3 319 212 (D) (D) 236 104 (D) (D) 13 722 529 EE 109 BB – 2 162 (NA) GG BB CC 1 555 GG AA CC BB 909 630 34 CC BB 516 FF 35 EE EE 44 241 165 63 FF CC 126 24 316 4 674 4 377 2 087 164 1 995 131 297 EE 1 477 147 BB FF 77 55 CC EE 737 (D) (D) (D) 202 105 (D) (D) (D) (D) 275 230 237 841 11 153 (D) (D) 102 645 (D) 3 452 (D) (D) 2 165 12 113 12 969 2 825 (D) (D) 10 523 1 792 41 917 134 314 125 50 5 63 6 721 494 334 631 262 pt. pt. pt. pt. 8 593 (D) 91 769 17 500 (D) (D) 7 440 3 593 (D) (D) 1 453 (D) 13 800 876 (D) (D) 1 065 401 (D) (D) Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. See footnotes at end of table. 12 2 12 – 2 11 31 (D) (D) (D) – (D) 2 860 8 384 (D) (D) (D) – (D) 544 1 519 (D) (D) (D) – (D) 130 370 EE AA CC – AA 44 159 RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] D_SIPES# 8D [UFCB,D_SIPES] UFCEN 3/ 7/ 95 9:47 AM MACHINE: EPCV22 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 2/ 28/ 95 12:27:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 1 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 2/ 28/ 95 12:28:27 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;1 2/ 28/ 95 12:28:27 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 2/ 28/ 95 12:30:43 KANSAS KS–27 Table 5. Summary Statistics for Places With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) WICHITA Retail trade 52 521, 3 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 543 544 545 549 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 553 pt. 553 pt. 555, 6, 7, 9 555 556 557 559 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 564, 9 564 569 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 5713 5714 5719 572 573 5731 5734 5735 5736 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 591 pt. 591 pt. Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Miscellaneous food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Other apparel and accessory stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Drug stores Proprietary stores See footnotes at end of table. 2 221 86 39 22 17 19 18 10 39 20 20 13 6 163 117 4 23 19 – 6 1 12 128 24 31 57 56 1 16 3 3 5 5 121 211 19 85 73 12 22 64 6 16 – 32 10 21 5 16 157 43 37 10 4 23 14 63 37 9 10 7 768 681 261 17 346 57 87 51 49 2 3 346 942 185 848 143 570 (D) (D) (D) 13 471 (D) 572 342 (D) (D) (D) (D) 591 120 579 359 2 210 4 377 5 174 – (D) (D) 3 574 812 614 713 485 31 578 46 943 (D) (D) 20 608 (D) (D) (D) (D) 149 400 154 136 (D) 47 191 43 464 3 727 50 469 34 928 1 045 (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 160 330 (D) 23 838 (D) (D) (D) (D) 75 524 (D) (D) 8 279 5 092 372 402 356 161 149 606 (D) 174 290 (D) 16 241 69 778 (D) (D) 390 800 22 935 17 202 (D) (D) (D) 2 705 (D) 50 326 (NA) (D) (D) (D) 60 383 58 357 164 1 214 648 – (D) (D) 471 67 435 55 205 3 074 7 320 (D) (D) 1 836 (D) (D) (D) (D) 10 086 19 063 (D) 5 277 4 714 563 6 273 4 267 168 (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 19 104 (D) 3 437 (D) (D) (D) (D) 7 438 (D) (D) 908 1 206 98 963 95 991 44 629 (D) 42 880 (D) 2 972 8 481 (D) (D) 91 999 5 140 3 885 (D) (D) (D) 527 (D) 11 828 (NA) (D) (D) (D) 14 329 13 863 38 281 147 – (D) (D) 109 15 206 12 434 693 1 727 (D) (D) 352 (D) (D) (D) (D) 2 570 4 858 (D) 1 317 1 161 156 1 715 1 016 48 (D) – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 4 364 (D) 730 (D) (D) (D) (D) 1 777 (D) (D) 224 274 23 643 22 882 10 844 (D) 10 157 (D) 761 2 026 (D) (D) 32 875 1 325 924 FF BB CC 203 BB 4 303 (NA) HH CC EE 3 715 3 493 14 135 73 – BB AA 51 2 496 1 831 141 440 EE AA 84 AA AA BB AA 799 1 985 CC 757 701 56 602 383 14 BB – CC BB CC BB BB 1 154 EE 219 BB AA CC BB 518 EE BB 86 67 13 509 13 044 5 946 EE 6 231 FF 465 595 FF AA KS–28 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 21 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 5. Summary Statistics for Places With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) WICHITA 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 5943 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 596 5961 5962 5963 598 5983 5984 5989 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. Con. 497 78 52 190 35 3 32 15 42 98 3 23 2 50 2 18 36 7 9 20 1 – 1 – 39 4 1 25 71 14 6 51 278 972 46 642 12 225 113 366 (D) (D) 14 083 (D) 24 614 56 941 (D) 33 125 (D) (D) (D) 7 034 60 610 (D) 13 286 (D) (D) – (D) – 11 123 3 079 (D) (D) 22 841 (D) 1 027 (D) 34 024 2 136 2 915 14 537 (D) (D) 1 385 (D) 3 780 6 205 (D) 2 782 (D) (D) (D) 1 006 5 531 (D) 2 614 (D) (D) – (D) – 2 453 188 (D) (D) 4 090 (D) 134 (D) 8 035 506 709 3 398 (D) (D) 289 (D) 963 1 382 (D) 592 (D) (D) (D) 258 1 334 (D) 600 (D) (D) – (D) – 627 22 (D) (D) 938 (D) 28 (D) 2 994 294 285 1 387 CC AA 147 EE 252 683 AA 259 AA EE AA 123 323 CC 114 BB AA – AA – 246 10 AA CC 297 BB 11 CC Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Stationery stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Nonstore retailers Catalog and mail-order houses Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling establishments Fuel dealers Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. Pet shops Art dealers Other miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 1Includes 2Includes sales from catalog order desks. data for leased departments operated within department stores. Data for this line not included in broader kind-of-business totals. Table 6. Summary Statistics for Counties With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) DOUGLAS COUNTY (Coextensive with Lawrence, KS MSA; see table 7.) JOHNSON COUNTY Retail trade 52 521, 3 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores See footnotes at end of table. 2 328 105 59 28 31 26 20 – 38 23 23 5 10 3 898 096 141 831 104 910 (D) (D) 21 288 15 633 – 640 624 516 632 507 160 (D) (D) 478 043 16 934 11 179 (D) (D) 2 996 2 759 – 62 458 (NA) 54 468 (D) (D) 111 494 3 792 2 617 (D) (D) 647 528 – 14 622 (NA) 12 546 (D) (D) 38 338 1 227 743 FF CC 264 220 – 4 818 (NA) 4 176 BB FF RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–29 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 22 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 6. Summary Statistics for Counties With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) JOHNSON COUNTY 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 543 544 545 549 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 553 pt. 553 pt. 555, 6, 7, 9 555 556 557 559 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 564, 9 564 569 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 5713 5714 5719 572 573 5731 5734 5735 5736 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 591 pt. 591 pt. 59 ex. 591 592 593 Food stores Con. 173 107 6 29 31 – 10 3 18 106 40 16 43 39 4 7 2 2 3 – 135 249 29 103 82 21 23 50 6 10 1 26 7 44 16 28 248 66 84 33 5 46 13 85 39 22 15 9 595 553 216 13 259 65 42 53 52 1 626 82 26 585 455 565 474 4 085 7 241 8 655 – (D) (D) 5 580 936 703 854 479 29 416 42 727 (D) (D) 10 081 (D) (D) (D) – 186 880 192 060 20 296 75 325 (D) (D) 47 343 33 340 (D) (D) (D) 18 198 (D) 15 756 (D) (D) 289 076 81 058 58 041 30 648 936 26 457 8 864 141 113 72 896 (D) 10 697 (D) 338 398 327 929 154 806 (D) 145 170 (D) 10 469 111 641 (D) (D) 475 428 37 123 5 459 63 206 59 048 558 2 437 1 163 – (D) (D) 598 71 458 61 174 1 155 8 039 (D) (D) 1 090 (D) (D) (D) – 10 979 21 483 2 870 9 106 (D) (D) 3 911 3 525 (D) (D) (D) 1 885 (D) 2 071 (D) (D) 33 079 10 593 9 447 5 156 133 4 158 1 295 11 744 6 550 (D) 953 (D) 97 732 95 454 50 407 (D) 36 207 (D) 2 278 13 807 (D) (D) 86 907 1 519 591 15 191 14 284 127 536 244 – (D) (D) 123 15 447 13 187 78 1 942 (D) (D) 240 (D) (D) (D) – 2 709 5 392 715 2 333 (D) (D) 966 891 (D) (D) (D) 472 (D) 487 (D) (D) 7 235 2 425 2 016 1 089 30 897 323 2 471 1 358 (D) 240 (D) 22 702 22 161 12 062 (D) 8 156 (D) 541 4 084 (D) (D) 20 320 357 130 5 481 4 985 32 304 160 – BB AA 77 2 492 1 975 27 443 EE BB 47 AA AA BB – 893 2 429 229 1 129 FF CC 501 331 BB BB AA 187 BB 239 CC CC 1 959 556 554 221 14 319 88 761 439 CC 113 BB 12 363 12 042 6 079 EE 5 118 EE 321 1 050 GG AA 5 626 257 57 Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Miscellaneous food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Other apparel and accessory stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Drug stores Proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores See footnotes at end of table. KS–30 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 23 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 6. Summary Statistics for Counties With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) JOHNSON COUNTY 59 ex. 591 594 5941 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 5943 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 596 5961 5962 5963 598 5983 5984 5989 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. Con. Miscellaneous retail stores Con. Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Stationery stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Nonstore retailers Catalog and mail-order houses Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling establishments Fuel dealers Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. Pet shops Art dealers Other miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 281 66 21 45 35 47 133 9 31 2 68 2 21 70 19 10 41 2 – 2 – 45 2 – 32 86 14 8 64 178 42 21 21 573 427 290 137 23 5 2 2 479 514 895 619 5 459 1 186 603 583 617 1 492 2 164 (D) 688 (D) 871 (D) 330 11 418 9 527 611 1 280 (D) – (D) – 719 (D) – 560 (D) (D) (D) 1 236 2 129 485 291 194 297 305 1 042 BB 304 BB 470 BB 186 2 281 1 827 127 327 AA – AA – 268 AA – 135 EE CC BB 340 22 992 32 671 80 483 (D) 36 646 (D) 26 197 (D) 9 602 187 148 13 26 652 369 182 101 (D) – (D) – 13 022 (D) – 10 682 (D) (D) (D) 30 758 2 580 5 915 9 470 (D) 3 010 (D) 3 957 (D) 1 358 48 41 2 5 846 137 330 379 (D) – (D) – 3 009 (D) – 2 302 (D) (D) (D) 5 340 RENO COUNTY Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores 419 17 9 5 3 – 14 5 5 3 6 35 23 2 2 8 30 7 8 7 8 36 32 3 12 10 2 5 9 3 39 13 9 8 9 452 069 22 899 16 698 (D) (D) – 75 612 63 62 1 11 538 851 739 022 53 796 2 666 2 031 (D) (D) – 7 952 (NA) 6 791 173 988 9 812 9 471 (D) (D) 183 9 472 6 797 517 1 432 726 2 015 2 849 233 647 (D) (D) 1 229 673 67 2 786 1 243 416 191 936 12 429 622 482 (D) (D) – 1 847 (NA) 1 574 38 235 2 316 2 232 (D) (D) 44 2 118 1 510 110 341 157 463 692 64 162 (D) (D) 293 155 18 655 316 88 39 212 4 808 169 117 BB AA – 720 (NA) 591 21 108 612 569 AA BB 17 404 261 26 71 46 193 318 18 112 CC AA 121 57 10 179 68 30 15 66 87 901 85 798 (D) (D) 1 289 114 648 95 6 7 5 034 522 545 547 31 791 20 960 1 380 5 267 (D) (D) 8 913 5 034 366 14 485 6 2 1 4 063 464 272 686 See footnotes at end of table. RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–31 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 24 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 6. Summary Statistics for Counties With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) RENO COUNTY 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 Con. 122 108 36 3 57 12 14 11 83 12 3 38 7 4 6 21 10 2 5 – – 5 8 41 759 40 479 11 361 (D) 23 374 (D) 1 280 14 451 27 563 6 045 (D) 10 2 1 2 4 740 232 585 385 538 10 836 10 584 3 570 (D) 5 747 (D) 252 1 552 3 856 283 (D) 1 419 265 231 332 591 878 (D) 454 – – 375 129 2 443 2 384 750 (D) 1 340 (D) 59 345 928 63 (D) 323 55 38 87 143 222 (D) 102 – – 91 34 1 693 1 638 546 BB 935 BB 55 107 413 49 AA 179 19 18 46 96 72 AA 45 – – 22 17 Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 5 088 (D) 1 711 – – 1 152 1 138 RILEY COUNTY Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores See footnotes at end of table. 394 11 7 1 1 2 8 4 4 2 2 33 21 – 4 8 29 7 4 12 6 29 47 5 21 18 3 7 8 6 29 10 7 2 10 108 98 33 4 55 6 10 7 422 799 10 632 4 668 (D) (D) (D) 74 075 68 570 67 712 (D) (D) 75 154 72 443 – 665 2 046 101 628 90 1 7 2 130 627 099 772 47 889 1 171 490 (D) (D) (D) 7 233 (NA) 6 438 (D) (D) 5 500 5 053 – 170 277 7 108 5 354 148 1 281 325 1 504 3 764 194 1 037 (D) (D) 1 387 434 712 1 928 524 (D) (D) 728 14 616 14 157 3 550 391 10 038 178 459 645 11 021 258 99 (D) (D) (D) 1 716 (NA) 1 547 (D) (D) 1 320 1 232 – 36 52 1 572 1 174 34 300 64 351 861 48 258 (D) (D) 298 112 145 461 123 (D) (D) 189 3 329 3 238 769 88 2 357 24 91 138 5 436 87 29 BB AA AA 693 (NA) 613 AA BB 482 408 – 34 40 333 223 10 80 20 176 480 28 169 CC AA 144 51 88 175 41 BB AA 80 2 462 2 334 616 60 1 632 26 128 49 22 773 31 961 2 146 9 480 (D) (D) 12 280 3 604 4 451 15 519 4 414 (D) (D) 5 566 53 569 51 13 1 35 366 699 467 666 534 2 203 6 642 KS–32 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 25 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 6. Summary Statistics for Counties With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) RILEY COUNTY 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 Con. 93 18 8 41 10 4 11 16 30 846 6 321 1 843 13 2 1 3 5 566 495 801 692 578 4 420 330 261 1 861 357 122 625 757 1 015 75 30 436 73 29 162 172 499 60 25 244 47 26 59 112 Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 5 1 5 – – 5 10 (D) (D) 1 909 – – 701 2 314 (D) (D) 422 – – 144 626 (D) (D) 105 – – 36 158 BB AA 52 – – 14 51 SALINE COUNTY Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores See footnotes at end of table. 382 12 4 2 3 3 8 4 4 1 3 28 13 1 5 9 28 7 9 9 3 39 31 4 10 8 2 6 9 2 36 10 4 7 15 104 88 34 2 45 7 16 5 480 821 30 140 21 168 (D) 3 922 (D) 82 184 68 118 66 919 (D) (D) 83 576 80 838 (D) (D) 1 266 86 771 74 135 (D) 6 434 (D) 63 700 22 809 (D) 5 978 (D) (D) 11 198 4 033 (D) 18 939 4 576 853 3 091 10 419 44 966 42 810 17 586 (D) 21 095 (D) 2 156 8 792 55 512 3 093 1 743 (D) 716 (D) 8 159 (NA) 6 513 (D) (D) 8 177 7 707 (D) (D) 191 7 480 5 968 (D) 1 075 (D) 4 077 2 560 (D) 690 (D) (D) 1 250 475 (D) 2 756 837 141 418 1 360 12 696 12 203 5 843 (D) 5 222 (D) 493 1 375 13 001 670 397 (D) 149 (D) 1 987 (NA) 1 604 (D) (D) 1 950 1 850 (D) (D) 39 1 715 1 354 (D) 257 (D) 910 655 (D) 170 (D) (D) 331 120 (D) 639 200 28 101 310 2 995 2 859 1 383 (D) 1 198 (D) 136 291 5 067 218 119 BB 42 AA 729 (NA) 581 AA CC 579 506 AA BB 38 321 210 BB 80 AA 387 283 AA 86 BB AA 125 51 AA 169 43 14 30 82 1 833 1 760 772 BB 822 CC 73 86 RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–33 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 26 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 6. Summary Statistics for Counties With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) SALINE COUNTY 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 Con. 91 13 5 42 9 6 6 21 9 2 4 – – 5 11 38 944 4 907 811 16 935 2 978 (D) (D) 8 504 11 324 (D) 1 165 – – 892 (D) 5 139 298 171 2 149 394 (D) (D) 960 1 502 (D) 245 – – 178 (D) 1 189 68 38 484 71 (D) (D) 210 344 (D) 63 – – 43 (D) 462 50 20 245 31 BB BB 114 65 AA 21 – – 11 BB Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. SEDGWICK COUNTY Retail trade 52 521, 3 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 543 544 545 549 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 553 pt. 553 pt. 555, 6, 7, 9 555 556 557 559 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 564, 9 564 569 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores Department stores Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Miscellaneous food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Other apparel and accessory stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores See footnotes at end of table. (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 (excl. leased depts.) 1 2 558 106 45 28 17 27 23 11 46 22 22 15 9 198 141 7 27 23 1 7 2 13 149 27 35 67 65 2 20 7 3 5 5 163 233 21 95 78 17 27 67 6 18 – 32 11 23 6 17 3 661 203 216 461 168 048 (D) (D) 13 701 16 344 18 368 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 665 076 651 448 (D) 5 045 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 849 286 738 324 33 710 53 403 (D) (D) 23 849 (D) (D) (D) (D) 198 991 163 068 14 902 52 624 47 445 5 179 51 497 35 950 1 045 (D) – (D) 9 396 8 095 1 995 6 100 427 961 26 674 19 700 (D) (D) 2 346 3 447 1 181 (D) (NA) (D) (D) (D) 67 868 65 449 (D) 1 394 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 69 852 56 426 3 157 8 203 (D) (D) 2 066 (D) (D) (D) (D) 13 124 20 296 2 227 5 990 5 214 776 6 446 4 425 168 (D) – (D) 958 1 208 316 892 100 131 5 869 4 390 (D) (D) 584 626 269 (D) (NA) (D) (D) (D) 15 918 15 351 (D) 323 (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 15 732 12 688 705 1 931 (D) (D) 408 (D) (D) (D) (D) 3 314 5 058 580 1 447 1 253 194 1 720 1 042 48 (D) – (D) 187 269 80 189 36 206 1 551 1 080 GG BB 175 242 54 HH (NA) HH CC EE 4 246 3 968 BB 161 BB AA BB AA BB 2 618 1 876 147 494 EE AA 101 BB AA BB AA 1 068 2 075 141 809 732 77 608 394 14 BB – CC 77 123 30 93 KS–34 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 27 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 6. Summary Statistics for Counties With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) SEDGWICK COUNTY 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 5713 5714 5719 572 573 5731 5734 5735 5736 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 591 pt. 591 pt. 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 5943 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 596 5961 5962 5963 598 5983 5984 5989 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. Con. 168 44 42 12 4 26 14 68 39 12 10 7 876 775 295 17 392 71 101 58 56 2 561 91 56 208 41 4 37 16 45 106 3 24 2 56 2 19 44 7 10 27 5 – 5 – 49 4 2 27 75 14 6 55 77 57 6 8 5 163 942 46 488 (D) 11 635 (D) 12 534 (D) 190 263 556 279 092 19 612 6 510 (D) 1 632 (D) 1 783 (D) 7 669 4 877 678 908 1 206 110 038 106 608 47 813 (D) 47 312 (D) 3 430 9 402 (D) (D) (D) 2 429 2 936 15 960 (D) (D) (D) (D) 3 904 6 595 (D) (D) (D) 2 309 (D) (D) 6 663 (D) (D) (D) 505 – 505 – 2 672 188 (D) 2 114 (D) (D) 134 3 439 4 470 1 475 (D) 313 (D) 398 (D) 1 827 1 128 201 224 274 26 250 25 381 11 581 (D) 11 158 (D) 869 2 235 (D) (D) (D) 578 712 3 720 (D) (D) (D) (D) 991 1 473 (D) (D) (D) 503 (D) (D) 1 573 (D) (D) (D) 110 – 110 – 688 22 (D) 474 (D) (D) 28 782 1 185 338 CC 64 AA 150 BB 532 338 41 86 67 14 912 14 382 6 356 EE 6 848 FF 530 640 FF AA HH 336 290 1 529 CC AA CC EE 283 719 AA EE AA 296 AA CC 374 CC CC CC 23 – 23 – 275 10 AA 143 EE BB 11 227 Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Drug stores Proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Stationery stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Nonstore retailers Catalog and mail-order houses Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling establishments Fuel dealers Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. Pet shops Art dealers Other miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 412 672 393 698 160 737 (D) 192 245 (D) 18 974 75 973 (D) (D) (D) 53 023 12 404 124 833 (D) (D) (D) (D) 25 793 60 368 (D) (D) (D) 17 157 (D) (D) 68 271 (D) (D) (D) 2 382 – 2 382 – 12 168 3 079 (D) 8 624 (D) (D) 1 027 18 860 SHAWNEE COUNTY (Coextensive with Topeka, KS MSA; see table 7.) See footnotes at end of table. RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–35 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 28 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 6. Summary Statistics for Counties With 350 Establishments or More: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) WYANDOTTE COUNTY Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 1Includes 2Includes 734 34 14 10 7 3 16 8 8 6 2 90 64 7 13 6 58 10 13 29 6 60 37 3 11 9 2 5 13 5 28 7 8 – 13 234 190 56 1 112 21 44 31 146 32 14 38 6 5 7 20 19 1 16 – – 12 14 786 348 39 372 28 725 7 366 (D) (D) 105 499 102 150 100 984 (D) (D) 182 870 176 233 (D) 2 041 (D) 161 715 118 18 17 7 491 864 303 057 91 537 4 521 2 765 991 (D) (D) 11 619 (NA) 11 148 (D) (D) 16 755 15 355 (D) 596 (D) 13 646 8 223 1 498 3 315 610 4 110 2 062 (D) 500 (D) (D) 686 (D) (D) 2 844 595 1 333 – 916 22 750 21 973 5 513 (D) 14 260 (D) 777 3 997 9 233 845 1 641 1 967 (D) (D) (D) 674 2 754 (D) 664 – – 403 (D) 21 760 969 633 218 (D) (D) 2 805 (NA) 2 696 (D) (D) 3 816 3 484 (D) 133 (D) 3 346 1 982 412 820 132 1 005 617 (D) 129 (D) (D) 269 (D) (D) 640 157 298 – 185 5 501 5 300 1 297 (D) 3 443 (D) 201 894 2 167 194 375 503 (D) (D) (D) 169 650 (D) 164 – – 106 (D) 8 347 301 200 59 BB AA 1 102 (NA) 1 052 BB AA 1 543 1 390 BB 83 BB 663 366 77 189 31 333 269 BB 63 BB AA 115 BB AA 156 29 64 – 63 2 989 2 887 757 BB 1 940 CC 102 264 727 108 148 205 BB BB BB 114 125 AA 61 – – 32 BB 80 297 15 394 (D) 4 611 (D) (D) 4 485 (D) (D) 17 715 4 421 3 895 – 9 399 89 327 82 710 18 185 (D) 56 133 (D) 6 617 32 597 61 562 17 365 5 955 12 518 (D) (D) (D) 3 758 15 484 (D) 2 812 – – 2 128 (D) sales from catalog order desks. data for leased departments operated within department stores. Data for this line not included in broader kind-of-business totals. KS–36 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 29 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 7. Summary Statistics for Metropolitan Areas: 1992 For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For definitions of metropolitan areas (CMSA’s, MSA’s, and PMSA’s), see appendix D] SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) KANSAS CITY, MO–KS MSA Retail trade 52 521, 3 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 543 544 545 549 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 553 pt. 553 pt. 555, 6, 7, 9 555 556 557 559 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 564, 9 564 569 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 5713 5714 5719 572 573 5731 5734 5735 5736 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 591 pt. 591 pt. Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Miscellaneous food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Other apparel and accessory stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Drug stores Proprietary stores See footnotes at end of table. 9 233 413 208 128 80 117 68 20 190 88 88 53 49 870 610 23 133 104 5 40 12 47 581 167 115 243 234 9 56 16 11 21 8 688 764 84 293 236 57 87 193 21 38 3 102 29 107 27 80 684 168 222 107 10 105 54 240 122 37 49 32 2 694 2 373 939 26 1 123 285 321 268 264 4 12 655 398 553 934 404 013 361 004 43 009 83 324 54 617 11 980 2 018 083 1 687 735 1 654 915 34 094 329 074 2 181 783 2 119 247 12 242 25 772 24 522 (D) 7 983 (D) 13 847 2 960 798 2 594 115 126 418 169 831 165 961 3 870 70 23 18 20 7 434 891 855 163 525 1 528 369 66 547 44 636 38 875 5 761 12 609 8 258 1 044 207 067 (NA) 181 926 4 017 21 124 216 577 203 113 2 059 7 882 3 523 (D) 1 484 (D) 1 597 233 519 187 019 7 932 32 169 31 215 954 6 2 1 2 399 342 248 261 548 355 925 14 496 9 830 8 474 1 356 2 889 1 567 210 48 767 (NA) 42 571 885 5 311 50 483 47 416 473 1 839 755 (D) 331 (D) 334 51 972 41 183 1 756 7 591 7 420 171 1 442 541 262 507 132 12 883 15 236 2 144 6 252 5 102 1 150 2 684 2 932 214 559 (D) 1 492 (D) 1 224 369 855 17 329 5 414 4 667 2 816 82 1 769 1 164 6 084 3 551 845 822 866 88 440 85 42 1 33 7 217 643 957 586 031 130 446 4 437 2 760 2 398 362 1 002 623 52 17 803 (NA) 15 501 427 1 875 18 481 16 800 132 1 104 445 AA 210 BB 186 9 015 6 468 378 1 858 1 790 68 311 111 67 104 29 4 445 6 681 637 3 075 2 715 360 1 299 1 093 75 221 BB 567 CC 577 207 370 4 627 1 219 1 296 618 29 649 287 1 825 1 027 223 365 210 47 853 46 057 21 919 841 20 507 2 790 1 796 3 454 3 429 25 903 216 508 432 61 347 199 684 176 417 23 267 110 401 96 917 6 157 18 626 (D) 51 760 (D) 40 083 16 212 23 871 620 135 161 056 132 80 1 50 321 134 613 574 53 682 61 668 8 474 25 627 21 494 4 133 10 788 11 670 837 2 247 (D) 6 113 (D) 5 109 1 522 3 587 77 718 23 763 21 190 12 958 323 7 909 5 079 27 16 3 3 3 686 561 997 421 707 31 643 295 179 62 33 20 115 220 027 597 271 1 354 645 1 289 557 29 580 122 703 138 605 453 507 375 741 362 176 7 146 31 521 196 926 484 915 64 942 409 541 407 174 2 367 13 220 47 665 47 344 321 3 223 12 248 12 192 56 RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–37 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 30 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 7. Summary Statistics for Metropolitan Areas: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For definitions of metropolitan areas (CMSA’s, MSA’s, and PMSA’s), see appendix D] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) KANSAS CITY, MO–KS MSA 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 5943 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 596 5961 5962 5963 598 5983 5984 5989 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Con. 2 081 262 144 804 161 57 104 101 157 385 22 86 8 206 14 49 228 59 62 107 31 1 30 – 186 13 4 123 286 54 24 208 1 144 831 124 939 42 073 419 81 40 40 094 233 725 508 188 185 7 853 8 468 55 9 4 5 833 983 822 161 44 071 1 871 1 884 13 2 1 1 168 167 064 103 13 650 891 891 5 249 868 484 384 669 930 2 782 73 904 62 1 211 94 438 3 686 2 190 527 969 135 AA CC – 817 48 30 523 1 380 276 75 1 029 Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Stationery stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Nonstore retailers Catalog and mail-order houses Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling establishments Fuel dealers Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. Pet shops Art dealers Other miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 52 587 97 733 187 541 5 85 6 62 5 21 345 216 58 70 586 240 780 943 333 659 883 764 141 978 6 267 16 196 23 387 7 1 9 3 74 47 11 15 988 626 029 663 917 164 858 949 326 583 1 468 4 155 5 378 231 1 761 268 2 117 216 785 17 11 2 3 627 020 876 731 635 (D) (D) – 2 033 128 77 2 210 4 438 680 214 3 544 17 274 (D) (D) – 36 7 1 39 110 21 5 83 601 556 382 959 070 531 152 387 2 455 (D) (D) – 8 239 574 295 9 328 20 3 1 16 282 127 083 072 LAWRENCE, KS MSA Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores 541 25 9 9 4 3 9 4 4 1 4 37 23 2 6 6 32 8 8 11 5 36 56 5 20 17 3 12 11 8 47 9 17 5 16 560 481 30 242 16 6 1 4 961 611 722 948 70 111 3 265 1 711 787 326 441 6 245 (NA) 5 598 (D) (D) 12 052 11 051 (D) (D) 335 8 963 7 242 333 1 157 231 2 620 3 938 279 1 361 1 196 165 977 829 492 4 554 883 1 736 264 1 671 16 593 711 372 193 68 78 1 488 (NA) 1 336 (D) (D) 3 021 2 788 (D) (D) 71 2 241 1 839 50 305 47 620 816 70 265 224 41 223 186 72 1 103 197 455 56 395 7 172 226 86 70 53 17 599 (NA) 533 AA BB 866 723 BB BB 49 423 316 15 75 17 273 426 37 133 116 17 123 82 51 339 59 123 22 135 63 674 59 600 58 649 (D) (D) 114 714 110 399 (D) (D) 1 879 102 353 90 4 6 1 333 318 394 308 44 642 31 088 2 880 9 992 8 927 1 065 8 035 7 373 2 808 31 943 5 9 3 13 602 364 775 202 See footnotes at end of table. KS–38 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 31 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 7. Summary Statistics for Metropolitan Areas: 1992 Con. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For definitions of metropolitan areas (CMSA’s, MSA’s, and PMSA’s), see appendix D] SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) LAWRENCE, KS MSA Con. 58 5812 5812 5812 5812 5812 5813 591 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 pt. pt. pt. pt. Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 146 127 57 2 59 9 19 13 140 21 13 56 9 9 8 30 16 1 9 1 – 5 18 66 791 62 360 26 062 (D) 31 490 (D) 4 431 11 286 63 748 11 568 2 552 30 3 14 2 10 998 042 646 697 613 18 490 17 702 8 280 (D) 7 875 (D) 788 1 530 8 454 562 297 4 172 522 1 628 651 1 371 1 577 (D) 351 (D) – 113 (D) 4 169 3 985 1 893 (D) 1 699 (D) 184 349 2 075 122 74 1 034 105 442 157 330 404 (D) 101 (D) – 38 (D) 2 987 2 795 1 218 CC 1 332 BB 192 133 900 102 47 443 47 153 58 185 146 AA 54 AA – 8 BB 9 418 (D) 1 929 (D) – 623 (D) TOPEKA, KS MSA Retail trade 52 521, 3 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 555, 6, 7, 9 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 564, 9 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 572 573 58 5812 5812 5812 5812 5812 5813 591 pt. pt. pt. pt. Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.)1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.)1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Other apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores See footnotes at end of table. 1 060 41 20 11 8 2 21 12 12 6 3 81 54 3 9 15 72 12 21 30 9 88 97 5 42 35 7 9 29 12 75 17 24 6 28 311 262 105 8 129 20 49 29 1 361 191 75 701 57 760 7 476 (D) (D) 265 660 r234 160 385 9 989 7 302 1 228 (D) (D) 25 031 (NA) (D) (D) (D) 20 859 19 217 (D) (D) 911 23 594 18 343 504 3 765 982 7 035 5 866 537 1 956 1 647 309 1 376 1 569 428 9 672 3 438 1 454 356 4 424 36 598 35 16 1 16 1 064 242 196 563 063 36 771 2 169 1 577 280 (D) (D) 5 714 (NA) (D) (D) (D) 5 084 4 705 (D) (D) 211 5 305 4 070 124 900 211 1 545 1 556 142 501 429 72 427 376 110 2 096 702 347 91 956 8 193 7 813 3 701 326 3 544 242 380 1 428 14 270 565 353 109 BB AA 2 162 (NA) GG BB CC 1 600 1 382 AA CC 98 924 630 34 207 53 611 809 35 305 261 44 241 165 63 649 183 126 24 316 4 925 4 622 2 198 164 2 129 131 303 466 737 (D) (D) (D) 206 648 197 252 (D) (D) 5 252 278 776 237 11 19 9 841 153 856 926 116 076 49 189 3 452 17 830 15 665 2 165 12 113 12 969 2 825 72 981 18 10 1 41 749 523 792 917 140 371 131 52 5 66 6 272 747 334 929 262 9 099 54 547 1 534 6 449 RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] D_SIPES# 8D [UFCB,D_SIPES] UFCEN 3/ 7/ 95 9:47 AM MACHINE: EPCV22 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 2/ 28/ 95 12:27:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 2 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 2/ 28/ 95 12:28:27 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;1 2/ 28/ 95 12:28:27 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 2/ 28/ 95 12:30:43 KANSAS KS–39 Table 7. Summary Statistics for Metropolitan Areas: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For definitions of metropolitan areas (CMSA’s, MSA’s, and PMSA’s), see appendix D] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) TOPEKA, KS MSA 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 596 598 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 Con. 245 46 26 96 13 8 20 55 16 2 13 – 2 11 33 101 242 18 494 4 853 49 7 3 10 27 095 440 593 791 271 15 292 923 1 044 7 604 1 065 401 1 812 4 326 2 421 (D) 945 – (D) 544 (D) 3 681 225 240 1 783 236 104 502 941 627 (D) 233 – (D) 130 (D) 1 559 157 81 698 77 55 142 424 293 AA 103 – AA 44 CC Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Nonstore retailers Fuel dealers Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 12 316 (D) 3 626 – (D) 2 860 (D) WICHITA, KS MSA Retail trade 52 521, 3 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 543 544 545 549 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 553 pt. 553 pt. 555, 6, 7, 9 555 556 557 559 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 564, 9 564 569 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores Department stores Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Miscellaneous food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Other apparel and accessory stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores See footnotes at end of table. (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 (excl. leased depts.) 1 3 004 135 59 39 20 36 29 11 54 25 25 17 12 249 181 10 34 24 1 7 2 14 188 38 42 80 76 4 28 9 6 6 7 221 257 24 105 88 17 33 72 6 19 – 36 11 23 6 17 4 079 406 239 292 185 890 175 084 10 806 17 689 17 345 18 368 653 216 541 404 533 808 (D) (D) 768 029 751 836 3 544 6 561 6 088 (D) (D) (D) 4 205 945 224 816 802 36 394 58 498 57 345 1 153 33 6 12 12 2 530 235 891 061 343 474 244 29 446 21 789 20 494 1 295 2 939 3 537 1 181 57 688 (NA) 51 212 (D) (D) 78 375 75 512 356 1 757 750 (D) (D) (D) 518 77 489 62 072 3 239 9 162 8 976 186 3 016 582 889 1 398 147 16 787 21 390 2 354 6 279 5 503 776 6 968 4 581 168 887 – 2 568 958 1 208 316 892 110 826 6 545 4 881 4 566 315 753 642 269 13 410 (NA) 11 773 (D) (D) 18 458 17 790 91 405 172 (D) (D) (D) 120 17 358 13 865 728 2 133 2 088 45 632 135 190 285 22 4 173 5 325 611 1 525 1 331 194 1 842 1 078 48 210 – 633 187 269 80 189 40 725 1 759 1 225 1 140 85 228 252 54 5 058 (NA) 4 532 CC EE 5 069 4 726 43 213 87 AA BB AA 59 2 994 2 124 157 555 539 16 158 43 39 66 10 1 451 2 205 153 853 776 77 663 413 14 87 – 235 77 123 30 93 258 321 171 209 15 536 54 304 49 125 5 179 56 118 37 156 1 045 5 897 – 20 818 9 396 8 095 1 995 6 100 KS–40 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 33 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 7. Summary Statistics for Metropolitan Areas: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For definitions of metropolitan areas (CMSA’s, MSA’s, and PMSA’s), see appendix D] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) SIC code Geographic area and kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) Annual payroll ($1,000) Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) WICHITA, KS MSA 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 5713 5714 5719 572 573 5731 5734 5735 5736 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 591 pt. 591 pt. 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 5943 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 596 5961 5962 5963 598 5983 5984 5989 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. Con. 196 53 53 22 5 26 18 72 43 12 10 7 993 884 337 18 452 77 109 69 67 2 642 106 63 236 50 6 44 17 50 119 5 25 2 62 2 23 51 9 11 31 11 – 11 – 60 4 2 27 82 15 6 61 174 496 50 959 28 14 1 12 483 932 017 534 21 002 7 133 4 024 2 072 169 1 783 1 929 7 916 5 124 678 908 1 206 121 108 117 51 3 54 8 518 123 404 093 898 4 812 1 623 872 427 47 398 435 1 882 1 183 201 224 274 28 763 27 856 12 374 736 12 636 2 110 907 2 499 (D) (D) 9 483 634 747 3 864 491 45 446 793 1 038 1 542 82 594 (D) 519 (D) 293 1 711 (D) (D) 614 193 – 193 – 813 22 (D) 474 (D) 161 28 (D) 1 270 366 263 95 18 150 93 548 354 41 86 67 16 588 16 018 6 924 290 7 812 992 570 736 FF AA 3 595 384 305 1 617 230 22 208 317 298 772 29 263 AA 313 AA 148 415 CC CC 154 47 – 47 – 340 10 AA 143 EE 74 11 CC Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Drug stores Proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Stationery stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Nonstore retailers Catalog and mail-order houses Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling establishments Fuel dealers Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. Pet shops Art dealers Other miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 1Includes 2Includes 16 299 78 58 6 8 5 755 828 556 279 092 451 967 432 172 13 216 30 253 192 082 084 895 19 714 86 130 (D) (D) 331 522 59 147 13 013 129 19 1 17 435 200 445 755 3 590 10 571 (D) (D) 40 388 2 650 3 101 16 607 2 326 213 2 113 3 309 4 096 6 876 351 2 789 (D) 2 373 (D) 1 133 7 256 (D) (D) 2 767 841 – 841 – 3 167 188 (D) 2 114 (D) 656 134 (D) 20 693 27 169 62 373 1 659 33 235 (D) 18 079 (D) 7 878 72 818 (D) (D) 17 400 5 237 – 5 237 – 14 419 3 079 (D) 8 624 (D) 4 278 1 027 (D) sales from catalog order desks. data for leased departments operated within department stores. Data for this line not included in broader kind-of-business totals. RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–41 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 34 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 8. Summary Statistics for the Area Outside Metropolitan Areas: 1992 For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) 72 936 3 048 1 923 1 767 156 787 190 148 7 965 (NA) II EE GG 11 952 11 288 CC EE 140 AA BB AA 79 5 665 3 653 434 1 342 GG BB 236 BB 92 73 AA 4 750 3 372 287 1 135 1 090 45 1 213 566 BB BB – 390 102 171 52 119 2 427 980 420 285 18 117 334 693 344 74 160 115 26 835 25 683 9 600 FF 14 309 GG 1 152 1 912 1 880 32 [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For definitions of metropolitan areas (CMSA’s, MSA’s, and PMSA’s), see appendix D] SIC code Kind of business Establishments (number) Retail trade 8 197 501 285 242 43 145 44 27 233 50 50 78 105 862 699 37 79 47 5 11 3 28 709 213 128 305 283 22 63 15 22 22 4 843 562 57 233 218 15 120 113 2 10 – 84 17 39 20 19 559 185 123 82 8 33 99 152 99 16 15 22 2 216 1 938 873 40 909 116 278 269 259 10 Sales ($1,000) 6 489 526 360 715 255 538 239 092 16 446 60 631 15 911 28 635 908 887 (D) (D) (D) (D) 1 426 346 1 403 020 (D) (D) 6 485 (D) (D) (D) 4 394 1 420 062 1 150 177 94 437 135 811 (D) (D) 39 637 (D) 20 413 10 851 (D) 686 873 241 487 19 115 64 670 62 286 2 384 103 354 45 124 (D) (D) – 30 185 8 480 9 224 1 984 7 240 225 238 94 595 37 431 28 899 684 7 848 33 404 59 34 6 10 8 808 141 945 365 357 Annual payroll ($1,000) 707 059 43 786 30 602 27 742 2 860 7 857 2 463 2 864 85 935 (NA) (D) (D) (D) 134 152 129 905 (D) (D) 914 (D) (D) (D) 596 111 144 80 284 6 413 20 896 (D) (D) 3 551 (D) 1 628 1 087 (D) 44 048 27 840 2 374 7 664 7 345 319 11 260 5 421 (D) (D) – 3 421 1 017 1 121 221 900 33 196 15 520 4 823 3 736 112 975 4 304 8 4 1 1 1 549 981 124 101 343 Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) 165 445 9 947 6 989 6 323 666 1 853 462 643 20 250 (NA) (D) (D) (D) 32 299 31 325 (D) (D) 201 (D) (D) (D) 139 25 667 18 516 1 513 4 863 (D) (D) 775 (D) 344 215 (D) 10 548 6 614 593 1 851 1 773 78 2 674 1 252 (D) (D) – 855 234 244 56 188 7 821 3 691 1 116 873 28 215 990 2 024 1 176 260 289 299 36 305 34 987 12 737 (D) 19 486 (D) 1 318 5 491 5 432 59 52 521, 3 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 531 533 539 54 541 542 546 543, 4, 5, 9 543 544 545 549 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 553 pt. 553 pt. 555, 6, 7, 9 555 556 557 559 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 564, 9 564 569 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 5713 5714 5719 572 573 5731 5734 5735 5736 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 591 pt. 591 pt. Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) 1 2 Department stores (excl. leased depts.) 1 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Other food stores Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Miscellaneous food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Other apparel and accessory stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Drug stores Proprietary stores See footnotes at end of table. 618 937 586 469 194 123 (D) 346 080 (D) 32 468 208 984 206 701 2 283 158 898 153 268 55 447 (D) 86 221 (D) 5 630 23 692 23 447 245 KS–42 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 35 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 8. Summary Statistics for the Area Outside Metropolitan Areas: 1992 Con. [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For definitions of metropolitan areas (CMSA’s, MSA’s, and PMSA’s), see appendix D] For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Paid employees for pay period including March 12 (number) 5 010 779 226 1 902 312 149 163 236 437 917 BB 123 AA 557 AA 166 662 147 170 345 EE 44 EE – 712 AA AA 92 325 68 9 248 SIC code Kind of business Establishments (number) Sales ($1,000) 391 997 81 950 12 795 116 29 12 17 149 795 786 009 Annual payroll ($1,000) 44 368 3 794 1 572 14 3 1 1 676 028 494 534 Firstquarter payroll ($1,000) 10 503 906 349 3 315 611 310 301 373 1 029 1 302 (D) 205 (D) 713 (D) 234 2 506 258 557 1 691 (D) 125 (D) – 1 181 (D) (D) 281 785 157 16 612 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 5943 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 596 5961 5962 5963 598 5983 5984 5989 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Stationery stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Nonstore retailers Catalog and mail-order houses Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling establishments Fuel dealers Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. Pet shops Art dealers Other miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 1 443 299 78 504 89 31 58 57 109 249 20 27 4 150 1 47 132 56 21 55 82 11 71 – 188 1 2 31 126 16 9 101 15 747 26 299 44 308 (D) 8 406 (D) 22 853 (D) 6 720 81 17 16 47 721 683 708 330 1 607 4 332 5 709 (D) 1 010 (D) 3 063 (D) 955 10 1 2 6 105 012 470 623 (D) 605 (D) – 4 811 (D) (D) 1 202 3 314 632 70 2 612 (D) 7 529 (D) – 26 631 (D) (D) 5 397 20 567 5 575 407 14 585 1Includes 2Includes sales from catalog order desks. data for leased departments operated within department stores. Data for this line not included in broader kind-of-business totals. RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–43 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 36 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 9. Places With 2,500 Inhabitants or More Ranked by Volume of Sales: 1992 For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Cumulative Geographic area Rank1 Kansas Con. Bonner Springs Paola Clay Center Marysville Beloit Holton Lansing Russell Phillipsburg Kingman Columbus Hiawatha Hillsboro Norton Lyons 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 (X) (X) (X) (X) (X) 57 51 44 44 42 42 42 33 32 31 29 28 26 25 25 23 23 21 21 20 19 19 19 18 16 16 15 14 14 13 12 12 12 12 12 10 9 9 8 8 6 5 4 2 057 483 126 114 785 750 325 957 388 576 058 263 415 705 456 974 418 262 094 010 849 556 361 991 931 591 629 618 308 543 988 897 622 114 034 760 989 508 940 341 331 701 003 317 – (D) (D) (D) (D) (D) 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 713 764 808 852 895 938 980 014 047 078 107 135 162 188 213 237 260 282 303 323 343 362 382 401 417 434 450 464 479 492 505 518 531 543 555 566 576 585 594 602 609 614 618 621 621 134 617 743 857 642 392 717 674 062 638 696 959 374 079 535 509 927 189 283 293 142 698 059 050 981 572 201 819 127 670 658 555 177 291 325 085 074 582 522 863 194 895 898 215 215 (X) (X) (X) (X) (X) 83.8 84.0 84.3 84.6 84.8 85.0 85.3 85.5 85.7 85.8 86.0 86.2 86.3 86.5 86.6 86.7 86.9 87.0 87.1 87.2 87.3 87.5 87.6 87.7 87.8 87.9 88.0 88.0 88.1 88.2 88.3 88.3 88.4 88.5 88.5 88.6 88.7 88.7 88.8 88.8 88.9 88.9 88.9 88.9 88.9 (X) (X) (X) (X) (X) Sales ($1,000) Sales ($1,000) Percent of State total Cumulative [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] Geographic area Rank1 Kansas Wichita Overland Park Topeka Kansas City Olathe Lenexa Lawrence Salina Hutchinson Manhattan Shawnee Garden City Hays Dodge City Emporia Leavenworth Great Bend Liberal Pittsburg Junction City Mission Merriam Newton McPherson Independence Prairie Village El Dorado Arkansas City Coffeyville Parsons Ottawa Roeland Park Winfield Fort Scott Derby Chanute Augusta Colby Pratt Leawood Wellington Abilene Atchison Iola Concordia 1Places Sales ($1,000) 17 566 800 3 346 942 1 627 097 1 317 247 716 000 639 198 563 543 472 395 380 351 258 233 225 224 214 197 192 172 169 166 159 139 136 118 118 116 111 104 99 96 95 91 87 86 84 84 71 70 67 63 62 62 62 57 463 573 414 730 340 292 017 124 483 610 429 146 696 902 090 521 502 780 759 779 525 707 211 165 121 465 278 092 436 661 667 378 737 400 928 207 994 559 172 240 Sales ($1,000) 17 566 800 3 4 6 7 7 8 8 9 9 10 10 10 10 11 11 11 11 11 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 13 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 346 974 291 007 646 209 753 225 621 002 353 611 844 069 294 508 706 898 071 240 407 566 706 843 962 080 197 308 412 511 608 703 794 882 968 053 137 209 279 347 411 474 536 598 656 942 039 286 286 484 947 520 934 664 004 296 313 437 920 530 959 105 801 703 793 314 816 596 355 134 659 366 577 742 863 328 606 698 134 795 462 840 577 977 905 112 106 665 837 077 Percent of State total 100.0 19.1 28.3 35.8 39.9 43.5 46.7 49.8 52.5 54.8 56.9 58.9 60.4 61.7 63.0 64.3 (X) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 Wamego Osage City Baxter Springs 65.5 Burlington 66.6 Garnett 67.7 68.7 Girard 69.7 Belleville Park City 70.6 Eureka 71.5 Mulvane 72.3 Osawatomie 73.1 Herington 73.8 Hesston Haysville 74.5 Gardner 75.1 75.8 Andover 76.4 Lindsborg 76.9 Fredonia Valley Center Anthony 77.5 78.0 Edwardsville 78.5 Neodesha 79.0 Hoisington 79.5 Fairway Baldwin City 80.0 Galena 80.5 Frontenac 80.9 Eudora 81.3 Mission Hills 81.7 Bel Aire 82.0 82.4 82.8 83.1 83.4 Goodland Hugoton Larned Scott City Ulysses with suppressed sales (if applicable) are listed at end of table rather than by rank to avoid disclosing data for individual companies. Table 10. Counties Ranked by Volume of Sales: 1992 For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Cumulative Geographic area Rank1 Kansas Con. Barton Cowley Crawford Seward Geary McPherson Harvey Labette Franklin Sumner Miami Neosho Dickinson Bourbon Allen 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 223 212 211 193 171 170 166 126 112 105 104 98 96 93 83 528 386 916 266 814 044 223 525 379 969 353 831 767 330 546 13 13 14 14 14 14 14 14 14 15 15 15 15 15 15 620 832 044 237 409 579 745 872 984 090 195 293 390 483 567 163 549 465 731 545 589 812 337 716 685 038 869 636 966 512 77.5 78.7 79.9 81.0 82.0 83.0 83.9 84.7 85.3 85.9 86.5 87.1 87.6 88.1 88.6 Sales ($1,000) Sales ($1,000) Percent of State total Cumulative [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] Geographic area Rank1 Kansas Johnson Sedgwick Shawnee Wyandotte Douglas Saline Reno Riley Leavenworth Finney Ellis Butler Montgomery Ford Lyon See footnotes at end of table. (X) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Sales ($1,000) 17 566 800 3 898 096 3 661 203 1 361 191 786 348 560 481 480 452 422 287 274 252 251 242 232 231 821 069 799 399 581 525 980 899 451 792 Sales ($1,000) 17 566 800 3 7 8 9 10 10 11 11 11 12 12 12 12 13 13 898 559 920 706 267 748 200 623 910 184 437 689 932 164 396 096 299 490 838 319 140 209 008 407 988 513 493 392 843 635 Percent of State total 100.0 22.2 43.0 50.8 55.3 58.4 61.2 63.8 66.2 67.8 69.4 70.8 72.2 73.6 74.9 76.3 KS–44 KANSAS RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 37 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Table 10. Counties Ranked by Volume of Sales: 1992 Cumulative Con. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Cumulative Geographic area Rank1 Sales ($1,000) Sales ($1,000) Percent of State total [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. appendix A. For information on geographic areas followed by , see appendix F] Geographic area Rank1 Kansas Con. Thomas Pratt Atchison Marshall Cherokee Cloud Pottawatomie Sherman Nemaha Osage Jackson Mitchell Clay Marion Grant Russell Brown Coffey Pawnee Rice Kingman Phillips Doniphan Jefferson Logan Harper Norton Morris Scott Barber Greenwood Ellsworth Wilson Republic Osborne 1Counties Sales ($1,000) Sales ($1,000) Percent of State total Kansas Con. 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 76 73 71 67 64 64 62 59 54 53 51 47 47 47 42 41 41 36 36 35 35 35 33 33 31 30 30 28 28 27 26 25 25 23 23 339 572 332 958 645 232 348 830 074 596 033 630 443 345 085 320 157 714 281 802 705 080 414 025 043 471 051 781 337 895 218 691 530 946 576 15 15 15 15 15 15 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 17 17 17 17 643 717 788 856 921 985 047 107 161 215 266 314 361 408 450 492 533 570 606 642 677 713 746 779 810 840 871 899 928 956 982 007 033 057 081 851 423 755 713 358 590 938 768 842 438 471 101 544 889 974 294 451 165 446 248 953 033 447 472 515 986 037 818 155 050 268 959 489 435 011 89.1 89.5 89.9 90.3 90.6 91.0 91.4 91.7 92.0 92.3 Trego Smith Washington Anderson Rooks Linn Ottawa Graham Gray Kiowa 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 23 21 21 21 20 19 17 17 17 15 15 15 15 15 13 12 12 11 11 11 10 10 10 9 9 9 9 9 8 8 8 7 6 6 6 6 6 5 3 1 216 589 543 367 821 216 396 315 067 791 772 758 551 026 804 537 423 951 546 263 595 465 084 977 452 419 248 109 973 694 457 311 796 738 432 219 044 806 660 358 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 17 104 125 147 168 189 208 226 243 260 276 292 307 323 338 352 364 377 389 400 411 422 433 443 453 462 471 481 490 499 507 516 523 530 537 543 549 555 561 565 566 227 816 359 726 547 763 159 474 541 332 104 862 413 439 243 780 203 154 700 963 558 023 107 084 536 955 203 312 285 979 436 747 543 281 713 932 976 782 442 800 97.4 97.5 97.6 97.7 97.9 98.0 98.1 98.2 98.3 98.3 98.4 98.5 98.6 98.7 98.8 98.8 98.9 99.0 99.1 99.1 99.2 99.2 99.3 99.4 99.4 99.5 99.5 99.6 99.6 99.7 99.7 99.8 99.8 99.8 99.9 99.9 99.9 100.0 100.0 100.0 Wabaunsee Stevens 92.6 Gove 92.9 Morton 93.1 Decatur 93.4 Cheyenne 93.6 Wichita Rawlins 93.9 Ness 94.1 Meade 94.3 Edwards 94.5 Stafford 94.7 Woodson Chautauqua 94.9 Sheridan 95.1 95.3 Kearny 95.5 Lincoln 95.7 Jewell Haskell Clark 95.9 96.0 Rush 96.2 Chase 96.4 Wallace 96.5 Lane Hamilton 96.7 96.8 97.0 97.1 97.2 Comanche Greeley Hodgeman Elk Stanton with suppressed sales (if applicable) are listed at end of table rather than by rank to avoid disclosing data for individual companies. RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES KANSAS KS–45 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 38 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 42 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa Appendix A. General Explanation CENSUS COVERAGE AND METHODOLOGY Structure and method of enumeration. Firms in the 1992 Census of Retail Trade were divided into the nonmail universe and mail universe. The coverage and the method of obtaining census information from each follow: 1. The nonmail universe consisted of firms which were not required to file a regular census return and included: a. All nonemployers, i.e., all firms with no paid employment during 1992. Sales information for these firms was obtained from administrative records of other Federal agencies. Although consisting of many firms, nonemployers account for less than 5 percent of total retail sales. The census included only those retail nonemployer firms which reported a sales volume of $1,000 or more during 1992. Data on nonemployers are provided in subsequent 1992 Census of Retail Trade reports; Nonemployer Statistics (RC92-N-1) and Selected Statistics (RC92-SP-1). b. Selected small employers, i.e., single-establishment firms with payroll below a specified cutoff. (The term ‘‘employers’’ refers to all business firms with one or more paid employees at any time during 1992 as shown in the active administrative records of other Federal agencies.) Although the payroll cutoff varied by kind of business, small employers generally included firms with one to four employees and represented about 10 percent of total retail sales of establishments covered in the census. Data on sales, payroll, and employment for employer firms below the payroll cutoff were derived or estimated from administrative records of other Federal agencies except for a sample of small employer firms. This sample was included in the mail universe. 2. The mail universe consisted of firms for which information was obtained by means of a mail canvass and included: a. Large employers; i.e., all multiestablishment firms and all employer firms above the payroll size cutoff referred to in section 1b. Within this category, a report of company organization was conducted RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES periodically to identify firms which operated establishments at more than one location and to obtain information on payroll and mid-March employment at each location. The 1991 Report of Company Organization was used as a coverage check in the census. In the 1992 census, all multiestablishment firms were asked to notify the Census Bureau of any establishments for which a form was not received. Report forms were subsequently provided to the firms for these establishments. b. A sample of small employer firms referred to in section 1b. These firms were sent the census mailing packages containing the appropriate 1992 questionnaire. For the retail trade sector, the overall sample of small employer firms was 20.6 percent which varied by kind of business. Method of classifying kinds of business. The retail trade classifications for all establishments were based on the Standard Industrial Classification Manual: 19871 (SIC). However, the method of assigning these classifications, and the level of detail at which establishments were classified, differed between the nonmail and mail universe as follows: 1. The nonmail universe. a. Nonemployers were classified on the basis of information obtained from administrative records of other Federal agencies. b. Selected small employers were classified on the basis of the most current census kind-of-business classification available from one of the Census Bureau’s current sample surveys or the 1987 census. Otherwise, the classification was obtained from administrative records of other Federal agencies. If the census or administrative record classifications proved inadequate (none corresponded to a 1992 census classification in the detail required for employers), the firm was sent a brief inquiry requesting information necessary to assign a 1992 census kind-of-business code. 1 Standard Industrial Classification Manual: 1987. For sale by Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402. Stock No. 041-001-00314-2. APPENDIX A A–1 JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 2 SESS: 37 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa 2. Establishments in the mail universe were classified on the basis of their self-designation, answers to questions on sales by merchandise line, and other special inquiries. COMPARABILITY OF THE 1987 AND 1992 CENSUSES The 1987 and 1992 censuses were conducted under similar conditions and procedures except for the following: Geographic areas. The boundaries of a number of areas for which data are shown in the 1992 census are not the same as in the 1987 census because of annexations; other boundary changes; and redefinitions of metropolitan statistical areas (MSA’s), primary metropolitan statistical areas (PMSA’s), and consolidated metropolitan statistical areas (CMSA’s).2 In addition, data for consolidated cities are included in the 1992 census. Data for special economic urban areas (SEUA’s) with 10,000 inhabitants or more in Michigan, Minnesota, New York, and Wisconsin qualified for publication in the 1992 census. This included townships in Michigan and Minnesota and towns in New York and Wisconsin. However, Minnesota did not have any townships that met the publication criteria. classification. However, when distinct and separate economic activities (for which different industry classification codes were appropriate) were conducted at a single location under a single ownership, and when conditions prescribed by the SIC manual for recognizing the existence of more than one establishment were met, separate establishment reports for each of the different activities were obtained in the census. Leased departments are treated as separate establishments and are classified according to the kind of business they conduct. For example, a leased department selling shoes within a department store would be considered a separate retail establishment under the ‘‘shoe store’’ classification. Firms. A firm is a business organization or entity consisting of one domestic establishment (location) or more under common ownership or control. All establishments of subsidiary firms are included as part of the owning or controlling firm. For the economic census, the terms ‘‘firm’’ and ‘‘company’’ are synonymous. Sales. Sales include merchandise sold for cash or credit at retail and wholesale by establishments primarily engaged in retail trade; amounts received from customers for layaway purchases; receipts from rental or leasing of vehicles, equipment, instruments, tools, etc.; receipts for delivery, installation, maintenance, repair, alteration, storage, and other services; the total value of service contracts; and gasoline, liquor, tobacco, and other excise taxes which are paid by the manufacturer or wholesaler and passed on to the retailer. Sales are net after deductions for refunds and allowances for merchandise returned by customers. Trade-in allowances are not deducted from total sales. Total sales do not include carrying or other credit charges; sales (or other) taxes collected from customers and forwarded to taxing authorities; commissions from vending machine operators; sales and receipts of departments or concessions operated by other firms; commissions or receipts from the sale of government lottery tickets; installment payments from leasing of vehicles, equipment, instruments, tools, etc. marketed under capital, finance, or full payout leases; and nonoperating income from such sources as investments, rental or sale of real estate, etc. Sales in this report do not include retail sales made by manufacturers, wholesalers, service establishments, or other businesses whose primary activity is other than retail trade. They do include receipts other than from the sale of merchandise at retail, e.g., service receipts, sales to industrial users, and sales to other retailers, by establishments primarily engaged in retail trade. Annual payroll. Payroll includes all forms of compensation such as salaries, wages, commissions, bonuses, vacation allowances, sick-leave pay, employee contributions to qualified pension plans, and the value of payments in kind (e.g., free meals and lodgings) paid during the year to all RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES EXPLANATION OF TERMS Establishments. An establishment is a single physical location at which business is conducted. It is not necessarily identical with a company or enterprise, which may consist of one establishment or more. Census of retail trade figures represent a summary of reports for individual establishments rather than companies. For cases where a census report was received, separate information was obtained for each location where business was conducted. When administrative records of other Federal agencies were used instead of a census report, no information was available on the number of locations operated. Estimates of this number were derived from a sample and are provided in the retail trade report, Miscellaneous Subjects (RC92-S-4). Each retail establishment was tabulated according to the physical location at which the business was conducted. The count of establishments represents those in business at any time during 1992. Appendix G provides a comparison of the number of establishments active any time during the year versus the number in business at the end of the year. When two activities or more were carried on at a single location under a single ownership, all activities generally were grouped together as a single establishment. The entire establishment was classified on the basis of its major activity and all data for it were included in that 2 Newly defined metropolitan areas (MA’s) were announced by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) effective June 30, 1993. A–2 APPENDIX A JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 3 SESS: 37 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa employees. Tips and gratuities received by employees from patrons and reported to employers are included. For corporations, payroll includes amounts paid to officers and executives; for unincorporated businesses, it does not include profit or other compensation of proprietors or partners. Payroll is reported before deductions for social security, income tax, insurance, union dues, etc. This definition of payroll is the same as that used by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) on form 941. First-quarter payroll. This item consists of payroll, as defined above, paid to persons employed at any time during the quarter January to March 1992. Paid employees for pay period including March 12. Paid employees consist of the full- and part-time employees, including salaried officers and executives of corporations, who were on the payroll during the pay period including March 12. Included are employees on paid sick leave, paid holidays, and paid vacations; not included are proprietors and partners of unincorporated businesses. The definition of paid employees is the same as that used on IRS form 941. Auxiliary establishments. Each company included in this census was asked to identify and separately report auxiliary locations whose primary functions were to manage, administer, service, or support the activities of the other establishments of the company. Data presented in this report do not include auxiliary establishments. Data for auxiliaries are presented in a subsequent report issued as part of the 1992 Enterprise Statistics reports. The retail trade industries were covered in the 1992 Economic and Agriculture Census. However, retail establishments of the following types were excluded from census coverage: 1. Federal, State, and local government agencies that sold merchandise, other than liquor stores operated by State and local governments 2. Officers’ clubs and officers’ open messes (classified based on primary activity with a T/O code of 90); and public school lunch programs except those which operated on a fee or contract basis (classified based on primary activity with a T/O code of 55) The following types of retail establishments were covered in the census: 1. Appliance stores owned by public utilities if the establishments were primarily engaged in selling appliances to customers 2. Liquor stores operated by State and local governments Establishments covered by the census were assigned kind-of-business classifications according to the industry classifications defined in the 1987 SIC manual. When a more detailed classification than defined in the SIC manual was needed, additional kinds of business were identified within a SIC industry. In general, retail establishments were classified according to the principal lines of commodities sold (groceries, hardware, etc.), or the usual trade designation (drug store, cigar store, etc.). Kind-of-business classifications are not interchangeable with commodity classifications; most businesses sell several kinds of commodities. The kind-of-business code generally reflects either the individual commodity or the commodity group which is the primary source of the establishment’s business. Thus, the classification of establishments by kind of business generally does not make it possible to determine either the number of establishments handling a particular commodity or the sales of that commodity. For example, the food stores classification excludes stores selling food if the sale of food is not the primary source of receipts; moreover, even though stores are classified as food stores, some of their receipts may be derived from the sale of nonfood products. (Information on the extent to which various broad groups of commodities or merchandise lines are sold by different kinds of business is available in the 1992 Census of Retail Trade report, Merchandise Line Sales, RC92-S-3.) KIND-OF-BUSINESS CLASSIFICATIONS Retail trade, SIC major groups 52 through 59 in the SIC manual, includes establishments primarily engaged in selling merchandise for personal or household consumption and rendering services incidental to the sale of the goods. Exceptions to this general rule are lumber yards; paint, glass, and wallpaper stores; typewriter stores; stationery stores; and gasoline service stations, which sell to both the general public for personal and household consumption and to businesses. These types of stores are included in retail trade even if a higher proportion of their sales is made to other than individuals for personal or household consumption. However, such establishments that sell their products only to institutional or industrial users and to other wholesalers and establishments that sell similar merchandise for use exclusively by business establishments are classified in wholesale trade. Other important characteristics of retail trade establishments are that they are usually places of business; they are engaged in activities to attract the general public to buy; they buy or receive as well as sell merchandise; they may process their products, although processing is incidental or subordinate to selling; and they are considered as retail in the trade. Not all of these characteristics need be present and some are modified by trade practice. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES Building Materials and Garden Supplies Stores (SIC Major Group 52) This major group includes retail establishments primarily engaged in selling lumber and other building materials; paint, glass, and wallpaper; hardware; nursery stock; lawn APPENDIX A A–3 JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 4 SESS: 43 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa and garden supplies; and manufactured (mobile) homes. It includes lumber and other building materials dealers and paint, glass, and wallpaper stores selling to the general public, even if sales to contractors account for a larger proportion of total sales; these establishments are known as retail in the trade. Establishments primarily selling these products but not selling to the general public are classified in wholesale trade. Lumber and other building materials dealers (SIC 521). Establishments primarily engaged in selling lumber, or lumber and a general line of building materials, to the general public. While these establishments may also sell to contractors, they are known as retail in the trade, even if sales to contractors account for a higher proportion of the sales. The lumber they sell may include rough and dressed lumber, flooring, molding, doors, sashes, frames, and other millwork. The building materials may include roofing, siding, shingles, wallboard, paint, brick, tile, cement, sand, gravel, and other building materials and supplies. For lumber yards, at least 32 percent of sales must be from the sale of lumber and millwork. Hardware is often an important line of retail lumber and building materials dealers. Also included in this group are home centers. These are retail establishments that sell both lumber and building materials and hardware. Additionally, they must sell at least 5 of the following merchandise lines: housewares, tools (power and/or hand), floor coverings, electrical supplies, kitchen cabinets, plumbing and bath supplies, lawn and garden products, paints and/or sundries, windows and/or doors, roofing, wallcoverings, ceiling products and materials, lawn and garden supplies, and appliances. Establishments not selling to the general public or known in the trade as wholesale are classified in SIC 503. Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores (SIC 523). Establishments primarily engaged in selling paint, glass, and wallpaper, or any combination of these lines, to the general public. While these establishments may also sell to contractors, they are known as retail in the trade, even if sales to contractors account for a higher proportion of the sales. Establishments which do not sell to the general public are classified in wholesale trade. Hardware stores (SIC 525). Establishments primarily engaged in selling a number of basic hardware lines, such as tools, builders’ hardware, locks and other security hardware, paint and glass, housewares, household appliances, cutlery, and building materials, no one of which accounts for 50 percent or more of the sales of the establishments. Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores (SIC 526). Establishments primarily engaged in selling trees, shrubs, other plants, seeds, bulbs, mulches, soil conditioners, fertilizers, pesticides, garden tools, and other garden supplies to the general public. These establishments primarily sell products purchased from others, but A–4 APPENDIX A may sell some plants which they grow themselves. Establishments primarily engaged in growing trees, shrubs, other plants, seeds, and bulbs are classified in SIC major group 01, and those growing Christmas trees are classified in SIC major group 08. Manufactured (mobile) home dealers (SIC 527). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of new and used mobile homes, parts and equipment. Establishments primarily selling travel trailers and campers are classified in SIC 5561 and those primarily selling utility trailers are classified in SIC 5599. General Merchandise Stores (SIC Major Group 53) This major group includes retail stores which sell a number of lines of merchandise, such as dry goods, apparel and accessories, furniture and homefurnishings, small wares, hardware, and food. The stores included in this group are known as department stores, variety stores, general merchandise stores, catalog showrooms, warehouse clubs, and general stores. Establishments primarily engaged in selling used general merchandise are classified in SIC 593, and those selling general merchandise by mail, vending machine, or direct selling are classified in SIC 596. Department stores (SIC 531). Retail stores normally having 50 employees or more, having sales of apparel and soft goods combined amounting to 20 percent or more of total sales, and selling each of the following groups of merchandise: 1. Household linens, dry goods, furniture, homefurnishings, appliances, and radio and TV sets 2. A general line of apparel for the family The employment and lines of merchandise sold in leased departments are both taken into account when classifying a department store. To qualify as a department store, sales of each of the lines listed above must be less than 80 percent of total store sales. An establishment with total sales of $10 million or more is classified as a department store even if sales of one of the merchandise lines listed above exceed the maximum percent of total sales, provided that the sales of the other group is $1 million or more. Relatively few stores are included in this classification as a result of this special rule and most of those which are would otherwise have been classified in the apparel group (SIC major group 56). Due to the relatively high level of leased department activity in department stores, department store sales have been separately presented for the following classifications: Department stores (including leased depts.) Department stores (excluding leased depts.) RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 5 SESS: 40 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa For States and for areas with 10,000 retail establishments or more, the following subcategories of department stores also are presented: Conventional department stores (SIC 531 pt.). Establishments which satisfy the criteria of a department store (see above) and: 1. Usually provide check-out service and customer assistance (sales persons) within each department 2. May have a catalog order service 3. Are not affiliated with a company which operates similar establishments on a national basis These stores often sell: 1. Soft goods and hard goods which are primarily nationally advertised brands 2. Appliances which are serviced by another company 3. Limited lines of merchandise through seasonal or special catalogs These stores often sell: 1. Soft goods and hard goods which are their own corporate brands or are unbranded 2. Appliances which are serviced by their own company Variety stores (SIC 533). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of a variety of merchandise in the low and popular price ranges. Sales usually are made on a cashand-carry basis, with the open selling method of display and customer selection of merchandise. These stores generally do not carry a complete line of merchandise, are not departmentalized, do not carry their own charge service, and do not deliver merchandise. Miscellaneous general merchandise stores (SIC 539). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of a general line of apparel, dry goods, hardware, housewares or homefurnishings, groceries, and other lines in limited amounts. Stores selling commodities covered in the definition for department stores but normally having less than 50 employees, and stores usually known as country or general stores are included here. Also included are most catalog showrooms. Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sales of merchandise by catalog, mail, or television order are classified in SIC 5961. Warehouse clubs (SIC 539 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of general lines of merchandise such as groceries; automotive tires, batteries, parts, and accessories; audio and video equipment; household appliances; office equipment and supplies; apparel; and books through warehouse-based operations. These establishments are sometimes known as membership warehouse clubs. Catalog showrooms (SIC 539 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of general lines of merchandise such as homefurnishings, housewares, jewelry, radios, televisions, stereo equipment, and sporting goods. Inventory is stored at the location but not usually on display. Customers order using a catalog and wait while the merchandise is being delivered from the stock room. Other miscellaneous general merchandise stores (SIC 539 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of several lines of merchandise such as piece goods, men’s and women’s apparel and accessories, dry goods, hardware, housewares, homefurnishings, and other lines in limited amounts. Included in this industry are stores selling commodities covered in the definition for industry 5311, but normally having less than 50 employees. Also included are stores known as country general stores. APPENDIX A A–5 Discount or mass merchandising department stores (SIC 531 pt.). Establishments which satisfy the criteria of a department store (see above) and usually: 1. Convey the image of a high-volume, fast turnover outlet selling a variety of merchandise for less than conventional prices 2. Provide centralized check-out service 3. Sell merchandise through self-service with minimal customer assistance provided in any department 4. Do not have a catalog order service These stores often sell: 1. Soft goods which are usually their own corporate brands or are unbranded 2. Hard goods which are primarily nationally advertised brands 3. Appliances which are serviced by another company National chain department stores (SIC 531 pt.). Establishments which satisfy the criteria of a department store (see above) and: 1. Usually provide check-out service and customer assistance (sales persons) within each department 2. Usually have a catalog order service 3. Are affiliated with a company which operates similar establishments on a national basis RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 6 SESS: 40 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa Food Stores (SIC Major Group 54) This major group includes retail stores primarily engaged in selling food for home preparation and consumption. Establishments primarily engaged in selling prepared foods and drinks for consumption on the premises are classified in major group 58, and stores primarily engaged in selling packaged beers and liquors are classified in SIC 5921. Grocery stores (SIC 541). Establishments primarily selling (1) a wide variety of canned or frozen foods such as vegetables, fruits, and soups; (2) packaged or bulk dry groceries such as tea, coffee, cocoa, dried fruits, spices, sugar, flour, and crackers, and (3) other processed foods and nonedible grocery items. These establishments often sell smoked and prepared meats, fresh fish and poultry, fresh vegetables and fruits, and fresh or frozen meats. Supermarkets and other general-line grocery stores (SIC 541 pt.). Establishments commonly known as supermarkets, food stores, grocery stores, and food warehouses primarily engaged in the retail sale of a wide variety of grocery store merchandise. Customers normally make large, volume purchases from these stores. Convenience food stores (SIC 541 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of a medium variety of canned goods, dairy products, pre-packaged meats, and other grocery items in limited amounts. They also may sell newspapers, magazines, refreshment items, cigarettes, beer, wine, and novelties. Customers normally utilize a convenience store to purchase a few items, whereas grocery stores are utilized for large, volume purchases. Convenience stores normally have a maximum of two check-out counters; less than 2,500 square feet of total under-roof floor space; a small, private parking lot; and hours of operation which normally extend beyond those of traditional grocery stores. Establishments primarily selling convenience store items but also selling gasoline are classified in kind of business 541130. Convenience food/gasoline stores (SIC 541 pt.). These are establishments that satisfy the criteria of a convenience food store and also sell gasoline; however, gasoline sales may not exceed 49 percent of total sales. Establishments selling convenience store items but primarily selling gasoline are classified in kind of business 554130. Delicatessens (SIC 541 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of cold cuts, oven-roasted meats, bread, and other grocery items. They often prepare sandwiches for carry-out and party platters, and may prepare gourmet platters for take-home consumption. Meat and fish (seafood) markets (SIC 542). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of fresh, frozen or cured meats, fish, shellfish, and other seafoods. They A–6 APPENDIX A may also sell poultry, dairy products, eggs, and other commodities. Meat markets may butcher animals on their own account, or they may buy from others. This industry includes freezer and locker meat provisioners. Food locker plants primarily engaged in renting locker space for the storage of food products for individual households are classified in industry 4222. Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of food via frozen food plans delivered to households or individuals are classified in SIC 5963, and establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of poultry are classified in SIC 549. Fruit and vegetable markets (SIC 543). Establishments primarily selling fresh fruits and fresh vegetables. They frequently also carry a limited line of grocery items. They are often found in public or municipal markets, or roadside stands. However, roadside stands of farmers selling only their own produce are classified in SIC major group 01. Candy, nut, and confectionery stores (SIC 544). Establishments primarily engaged in selling nuts, popcorn, boxed or bulk candy and other confections such as candied fruits, and chewing gum. Ice cream, frozen yogurt, and soft drinks are often sold in these stores. Candy or confectionery stores making their own products, and candy and popcorn stands in theaters are classified here. Dairy products stores (SIC 545). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of packaged dairy products such as milk, cream, butter, cheese, and related products to over-the-counter customers. Ice cream and frozen yogurt stands are classified in SIC 5812 and establishments selling ice cream and similar products from trucks or wagons are classified in SIC 5963. Establishments primarily engaged in processing and distributing milk and cream are classified in SIC 2026. Retail bakeries (SIC 546). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of bakery products. The products may be purchased from others or made on the premises. Establishments manufacturing bakery products for the trade are classified in SIC 2051 and those purchasing bakery products and selling them house to house are classified in SIC 5963. Retail bakeries—baking and selling (SIC 546 pt.). Establishments selling, over the counter, bakery products such as breads, rolls, cakes, cookies, and pies at least part of which are baked on the premises. Retail bakeries—selling only (SIC 546 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of bakery products such as breads, cakes, and pies none of which are produced on the premises. Miscellaneous food stores (SIC 549). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of specialized foods, not elsewhere classified, such as eggs, poultry, health RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 7 SESS: 37 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa foods, vitamins, spices, herbs, coffee, and tea. The poultry stores may sell live poultry, slaughter and clean poultry for their own account, and sell dressed fowls or sell fowls cleaned and dressed by others. Automotive Dealers and Gasoline Service Stations (SIC Major Group 55) This major group includes retail dealers selling new and used automobiles, boats, recreational vehicles and utility trailers, and motorcycles and mopeds; dealers selling new automobile parts and accessories; and gasoline service stations selling gasoline and lubricating oils. Automobile repair shops maintained by establishments engaged in the sale of new automobiles also are included unless reported separately. New and used car dealers (SIC 551). Establishments primarily engaged in the sale of new automobiles or new and used automobiles. These establishments have a franchise for the sale of new domestic and/or new imported automobiles. They frequently maintain repair departments and carry stocks of replacement parts, tires, batteries, and automotive accessories. These establishments also frequently sell pickups and vans at retail. Used car dealers (SIC 552). Establishments primarily engaged in selling used cars and not holding a franchise for the sale of new passenger cars. Some of these dealers may sell a small quantity of trucks and farm equipment. Some maintain repair and service departments. These establishments also frequently sell used pickups and vans at retail. Auto and home supply stores (SIC 553). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of auto supplies such as automotive batteries, parts, accessories; and sundry supplies such as polishes, paint, and decorative items. Establishments where used tires, batteries, and accessories exceed 49 percent of total sales are classified in SIC 501. Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores (SIC 553 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of new automotive tires and tubes. These establishments frequently have facilities for tire recapping and vulcanizing. These establishments also sell auto supplies such as automotive batteries, parts, and accessories. Establishments engaged in producing and installing custom-made seat covers for household users are included here. Home and auto supply stores (SIC 553 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in selling a combination of lines such as tires, batteries and accessories; household appliances; sporting goods; housewares and hardware. These differ from tire, battery, and accessory stores in that, although the largest merchandise line sales may be in automotive parts, accessories, and repairs, a considerable amount of sales also are made in nonautomotive lines. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES Gasoline service stations (SIC 554). Establishments primarily engaged in selling gasoline and automotive lubricants. These establishments frequently sell other merchandise such as tires, batteries, accessories, and other automobile parts or perform minor repair work. Establishments called garages but deriving more than half of their receipts from the sale of gasoline and automotive lubricants are included. Gasoline stations combined with other activities such as grocery stores, convenience stores, or car washes are classified based on primary activities as determined by sales. Gasoline/convenience food stores (SIC 554 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of gasoline and automotive lubricants and also sell a line of convenience store items such as milk, eggs, bread, beer, pet food, detergents, etc. Establishments selling gasoline and lubricants but primarily selling convenience food items are classified in SIC 541. Other gasoline service stations and truck stops (SIC 554 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in selling gasoline and automotive lubricants. These establishments usually sell tires, batteries, and accessories and perform related services. They also may do minor repair work. Truck stops primarily sell diesel fuel to truckers. They also may sell gasoline and lubricants, provide repair services, and operate a restaurant or motel as part of the truck stop establishment. They normally are open on a 24-hour per day basis. Boat dealers (SIC 555). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of new and used motorboats and other watercraft including parts, accessories, marine supplies, and outboard motors. Recreational vehicle dealers (SIC 556). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of new and used motor homes, recreational trailers, and campers (pickup coaches) including parts and accessories. Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of manufactured (mobile) homes are classified in SIC 527, and those primarily selling utility trailers are classified in SIC 559. Motorcycle dealers (SIC 557). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of new and used motorcycles, including motor scooters, mopeds, all-terrain vehicles, and parts and accessories. Automotive dealers, not elsewhere classified (SIC 559). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of new and used automotive vehicles, utility trailers, and automotive equipment and supplies, not elsewhere classified, such as snowmobiles, dunebuggies, and go-carts. Also included are establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of aircraft. Apparel and Accessory Stores (SIC Major Group 56) This major group includes retail stores primarily engaged in selling clothing of all kinds and related articles for APPENDIX A A–7 JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 8 SESS: 38 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa personal wear and adornment. Not included are establishments which meet the criteria for Department Stores (SIC 531) or Miscellaneous General Merchandise Stores (SIC 539) even though most of their receipts are from the sale of apparel and apparel accessories. Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores (SIC 561). Establishments primarily engaged in selling men’s and boys’ ready-to-wear clothing and accessories. Establishments are included in this category if (1) sales of all types of apparel (except as noted in the definition for general merchandise stores) account for 50 percent or more of total sales and (2) receipts from sales of all men’s and boys’ apparel are three or more times the receipts from sales of all women’s and girls’ apparel. Women’s clothing stores (SIC 562). Establishments primarily engaged in selling women’s and girls’ ready-towear apparel. Establishments are included in this category if (1) sales of all types of apparel (except as noted in the definition for general merchandise stores) account for 50 percent or more of total sales, (2) sales of all women’s and girls’ apparel are three or more times the sales of all men’s and boys’ apparel, and (3) sales of dresses, skirts, slacks, coats, suits, and furs are two or more times greater than the sales of millinery, hosiery, underwear, blouses, handbags, and other apparel and accessories. Custom tailors primarily engaged in making women’s clothing to individual order are classified in SIC 569. Women’s accessory and specialty stores (SIC 563). Establishments primarily engaged in selling women’s accessories and specialties such as millinery, hats, foundation garments, lingerie, hosiery, costume jewelry, gloves, handbags, and fur including custom-made. Furriers and fur shops (SIC 563 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in making fur coats and other fur apparel to custom order and selling ready-made fur coats and other fur apparel. If fur repair and storage are the chief sources of receipts, the establishments are classified in Services, SIC 7219. Other women’s accessory and specialty stores (SIC 563 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in selling a specialized line of women’s accessories such as blouses, knitwear, hosiery, hats, foundation garments, negligees, costume jewelry, gloves and handbags. Juniors’ and misses’ accessory and specialty apparel is classified here. Children’s and infants’ wear stores (SIC 564). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of children’s and infants’ clothing, furnishings, and accessories. They may specialize in either children’s or infants’ wear or sell a combination of children’s and infants’ wear. Family clothing stores (SIC 565). Establishments primarily engaged in selling clothing, furnishings, and accessories for men, women, and children, without specializing A–8 APPENDIX A in sales for an individual sex or age group. Establishments are included in this category if (1) sales of all types of apparel (except as noted in the definition for general merchandise stores) account for 50 percent or more of their total sales, and (2) sales of apparel items for an individual sex or age group are not more than three times the sales of all other apparel items. Men’s shoe stores (SIC 566 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in selling men’s and boys’ shoes and other footwear. Establishments selling women’s and girls’ and/or children’s and infants’ footwear are included in this classification, if sales of men’s and boys’ footwear are more than three times the combined sales of women’s, girls’, children’s, and infants’ footwear. Women’s shoe stores (SIC 566 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in selling women’s and girls’ shoes and other footwear. Establishments selling men’s and boys’ and/or children’s and infants’ footwear are included in this classification, if sales of women’s and girls’ footwear are more than three times the combined sales of men’s, boys’, children’s, and infants’ footwear. Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores (SIC 566 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in selling children’s and infants’ shoes and other footwear. Establishments selling men’s, boys’, and/or women’s and girls’ footwear are included in this classification, if sales of children’s and infants’ footwear are more than three times the combined sales of men’s, boys’, women’s, and girls’ footwear. Family shoe stores (SIC 566 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in selling both men’s and women’s shoes and other footwear; they may or may not sell children’s shoes. Frequently, they also sell accessories such as hosiery, gloves, and handbags. Establishments are included in this classification, if sales of any one of the three major groupings (men’s and boys’ footwear, women’s and girls’ footwear, and children’s and infants’ footwear) are not more than three times the sales of the other two groups combined. Athletic footwear stores (SIC 566 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in selling athletic shoes for activities such as tennis, jogging, baseball, softball, basketball, boxing, racquetball, football, volleyball, etc. These establishments may also sell athletic apparel. Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores (SIC 569). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of specialized lines of apparel and accessories, not elsewhere classified, such as uniforms, bathing suits, raincoats, riding apparel, sports apparel, umbrellas, wigs, and toupees. This industry also includes custom tailors primarily engaged in making and selling men’s and women’s clothing, except fur apparel. Establishments primarily engaged in making fur apparel to custom order are classified in SIC 563. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 9 SESS: 43 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa Furniture and Homefurnishings Stores (SIC Major Group 57) This major group includes retail stores selling goods used for furnishing the home such as furniture, floor coverings, draperies, glass and chinaware, domestic stoves, refrigerators, and other household electric and gas appliances. Establishments selling electric and gas appliances are included in this group only if the major part of their sales consists of articles for home use. These stores also may perform repair work on household appliances, radios, televisions, and stereo equipment; but establishments primarily engaged in repair of these products are classified in SIC 76. Dealers primarily engaged in selling antique and secondhand furniture are classified in SIC 5932. Stores furnishing interior decorating service are classified according to the merchandise handled. Stores primarily engaged in selling furnishings in conjunction with an interior decorator service are classified according to the merchandise handled; if the interior designer primarily advises clients on selection of merchandise, the establishment is classified in SIC 7389. Furniture stores (SIC 5712). Establishments primarily engaged in selling new household furniture, beds, mattresses, springs, and other sleep equipment. Also included in this classification are establishments selling household appliances, phonographs, radios, television sets, and floor coverings, provided the receipts from sales of furniture and sleep equipment exceed those from sales of other merchandise. Furniture warehouse showrooms, sleep shops and waterbed stores, and specialty furniture stores such as baby furniture stores, are classified here. If sales of new office furniture account for more than half of the total sales, the establishments are classified in SIC 502120. Floor covering stores (SIC 5713). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of rugs, carpets, linoleum, floor tile, and related products. Stores selling ceramic (wall or floor) tile are classified in SIC 521130. Establishments included in this industry may incidentally perform installation but contractors primarily engaged in installing floor coverings for others are classified in SIC 1743 or 1752. Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores (SIC 5714). Establishments primarily engaged in selling draperies, curtains, slipcovers, and upholstery materials. Establishments primarily selling custom-made draperies and slipcovers for household use also are included. Establishments primarily engaged in reupholstering or repairing furniture are classified in SIC 7641. Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores (SIC 5719). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of miscellaneous homefurnishings such as china, glassware, and metalware for kitchen and table use; bedding and linen; brooms and brushes; lamps and shades; mirrors and pictures; and venetian blinds and window shades. Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of miscellaneous homefurnishings by house-to-house canvass or by party-plan merchandising are classified in SIC 5963. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES Household appliance stores (SIC 572). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of electric and gas refrigerators, stoves, microwave ovens, home freezers, and other household appliances such as electric irons, percolators, hot plates, vacuum cleaners, sewing machines, dehumidifiers, and self contained room air-conditioners. Many such stores also sell radios and television sets. Radio, television, and electronics stores (SIC 5731). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of radios, television sets, compact disc players, record players, high fidelity (hi-fi) sound reproducing equipment, and other consumer electronics equipment. Such establishments also may sell additional lines such as household appliances, computers, computer peripheral equipment, software, musical instruments, and records. Establishments in this industry may perform incidental installation and repair work on radios, televisions, and other consumer electronics equipment. Establishments primarily engaged in the installation and repair of these products are classified in SIC 7622. Computer stores (SIC 5734 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of computer hardware and peripheral equipment such as printers, disk drives, etc. Computer software and computer furniture frequently are sold in these establishments. Computer software stores (SIC 5734 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of prepackaged (off-the-shelf) computer software. Computer furniture, peripheral equipment, books, supplies, and accessories are frequently sold in these establishments. Record and prerecorded tape stores (SIC 5735). Establishments primarily engaged in selling phonograph records, compact discs, and prerecorded audio and video tapes and discs. Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of computer software are classified in SIC 5734 and those primarily engaged in the rental of video tapes in SIC 7841. Musical instrument stores (SIC 5736). Establishments primarily engaged in selling musical instruments such as organs, pianos, horns, stringed instruments, and percussion instruments; sheet music; and similar supplies. Eating and Drinking Places (SIC Major Group 58) This major group includes retail establishments engaged in selling prepared foods and drinks for consumption on the premises. Also included are caterers which serve prepared food other than at the place of business and lunch counters and refreshment stands selling prepared foods and drinks for immediate consumption. In-plant food contractors are included here as well as leased eating and drinking concessions in hotels, motels, sports arenas, and other amusement places. APPENDIX A A–9 JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 10 SESS: 37 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa Restaurants (SIC 5812 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in serving prepared food and beverages. Included here are only those establishments in which waiters/waitresses take orders from patrons while the patrons are seated at a counter, booth, or table. They often serve alcoholic beverages. Establishments in which sales of alcoholic beverages for consumption on the premises exceed sales of prepared food and nonalcoholic beverages are classified in Drinking Places (SIC 5813). Cafeterias (SIC 5812 pt.). Establishments engaged in serving a wide variety of prepared food and beverages primarily through the use of a cafeteria line where customers make selections from displayed items. Some limited waiter/waitress service may be provided. Table and/or booth seating facilities are usually provided. Refreshment places (SIC 5812 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in selling limited lines of refreshments and prepared food. Included in this group are establishments which prepare items such as chicken and hamburgers for consumption either on or near the premises or for ‘‘takehome’’ consumption. Such establishments do not have waiter/waitress service where the patron’s order is taken while the patron is seated at a table, booth, or counter. Other eating places (SIC 5812 pt.). This includes social caterers, contract feeding and ice cream and frozen yogurt shops. See following descriptions. Social caterers (SIC 5812 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in serving prepared food and beverages for weddings, banquets, etc. at a hall or similar dedicated facility rather than at a fixed business location. Such establishments also may arrange for some entertainment but entertainment should be a minor part of the business. (Separate data are shown only at the national level.) Contract feeding (SIC 5812 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in providing food service under contract to another company; hospital; or governmental, penal, or educational institution. The facilities and personnel of these establishments may be provided by the contracting company, institution, etc., but the management must always be supplied by the contractor. (Separate data are shown only at the national level.) Ice cream and frozen yogurt shops (SIC 5812 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in selling ice cream, frozen yogurt, or other frozen ices for consumption either on or near the premises. ‘‘Take-home’’ packages also may be provided for ice cream sold in bulk. (Separate data are shown only at the national level.) Establishments known as ice cream or yogurt shops but primarily selling hamburgers, hot dogs, etc. are classified in SIC 581240. Drinking places (SIC 5813). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of alcoholic drinks such as beer, A–10 APPENDIX A ale, wine, and liquor for consumption on the premises. The sale of food frequently accounts for a substantial portion of the receipts of these establishments. Meals may or may not be served. Miscellaneous Retail Stores (SIC Major Group 59) This major group includes retail establishments not elsewhere classified. These establishments fall into the following categories: drug stores and proprietary stores; liquor stores; used merchandise stores; miscellaneous shopping goods stores; nonstore retailers, fuel dealers, florists, cigar stores and stands, news dealers and newsstands, and miscellaneous retail stores not elsewhere classified. Drug stores (SIC 591 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of prescription drugs. They may carry a number of related lines such as cosmetics, toiletries, tobacco, and novelty merchandise and may operate a soda fountain or lunch counter. Some of these stores sell small electrical appliances, window fans, dishes, lawn chairs, and similar products. Drug stores are classified here if any prescriptions are sold or if there is an indication that a pharmacist is employed. These stores are classified on the basis of their usual trade designation rather than on the stricter interpretation of commodities handled. Proprietary stores (SIC 591 pt.). Establishments generally selling the same merchandise as drug stores, except that prescriptions are not filled and sold. Liquor stores (SIC 592). Establishments primarily engaged in selling packaged alcoholic beverages such as ale, beer, wine, and liquor for consumption off the premises. Liquor stores operated by States, counties, and municipalities are included. Used merchandise stores (SIC 593). This industry includes stores primarily engaged in the retail sale of used merchandise, antiques, and secondhand goods such as clothing and shoes; furniture; books and rare manuscripts; musical instruments; office furniture; phonographs and phonograph records; and store fixtures and equipment. The industry also includes pawnshops. Dealers primarily engaged in selling used motor vehicles, trailers, and boats are classified in major group 55; and those primarily selling used mobile homes in SIC 5271. Establishments primarily selling used automobile parts and accessories are classified in SIC 5015 and scrap and waste dealers are classified in SIC 5093. Establishments primarily engaged in automobile repair are classified in SIC 753. General-line sporting goods stores (SIC 5941 pt.). Establishments primarily engaged in selling a general line of sporting goods and equipment for hunting, camping, fishing, skiing, riding, tennis, golf, and other sports; and gymnasium and playground equipment. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 11 SESS: 40 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa Specialty-line sporting goods stores (SIC 5941 pt.). Establishments specializing in a maximum of four lines of sporting goods and equipment such as guns, bicycles, trophies, skiing, golfing, bowling, and billiards equipment. These stores may also sell parts and/or accessories for the specialized line and often rent and/or repair the line they sell. Sales of motorcycles and motor scooters (including mopeds) are classified in SIC 5571. Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of athletic footwear are classified in SIC 5661. Book stores (SIC 5942). Establishments primarily engaged in selling new books and periodicals. Stationery and related items may also be sold. The subclassifications are general, specialty, and college book stores. Book clubs (not engaged in publishing) primarily selling new books through the mail are included in mail-order houses (SIC 5961). Establishments primarily engaged in the sale of used books are classified in SIC 593. Stationery stores (SIC 5943). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of stationery such as paper and paper products (including printing and engraving), post cards, novelties, and school supplies. These establishments also may sell additional lines of office type supplies such as accounting and legal forms, blankbooks and forms, and office forms and supplies. Establishments primarily engaged in selling office supply forms and supplies are classified in SIC 5112. Stores specializing in the sale of artists’ supplies are classified in SIC 5999. Jewelry stores (SIC 5944). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of any combination of the lines of jewelry such as diamonds and other precious stones; rings, bracelets, and brooches; sterling and plated silverware; and watches and clocks. Stores primarily engaged in watch and jewelry repair are classified in SIC 7631. Establishments primarily engaged in selling costume jewelry are classified in kind of business 563210. Hobby, toy, and game shops (SIC 5945). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of toys, games, and hobby and craft kits and supplies. Establishments primarily engaged in selling artists’ supplies or collectors’ items such as coins, stamps, and autographs are classified in SIC 5999. Camera and photographic supply stores (SIC 5946). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of cameras, film, and other photographic supplies and equipment. Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of video cameras are classified in SIC 5731. Establishments primarily engaged in finishing films are classified in SIC 7384. Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops (SIC 5947). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of combined lines of gifts and novelty merchandise, souvenirs, greeting cards, holiday decorations, and miscellaneous small art goods. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES Luggage and leather goods stores (SIC 5948). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of luggage, trunks, and leather goods, except apparel. Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores (SIC 5949). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of sewing supplies, fabrics, patterns, yarn, and other needlework accessories. Catalog and mail-order houses (SIC 5961). Establishments primarily selling merchandise as a result of orders received by catalog, mail, or television order. Customers are made aware of goods available for sale through catalogs, mailing pieces, advertisements in newspapers and magazines, advertising on radio and television, and by operating catalog stores that carry little stock other than display items. They receive their orders by phone or mail and fill most of their orders by mail. These establishments do not ordinarily maintain stock for sale on the premises. Departmentalized retail stores normally with 50 employees or more and operated by mail-order houses and selling a general line of merchandise are classified in SIC 531. Retail stores normally with less than 50 employees and operated by mail-order houses and selling a general line of merchandise are classified in SIC 539. Establishments primarily engaged in mail-order sales of computer hardware and/or software and television order (home shopping) sales are included within the classification. Mail-order houses, department store merchandise (SIC 5961 pt.). These are mail-order houses selling the following lines of merchandise; furniture; homefurnishings; appliances; radio and TV sets; household linens and dry goods; and apparel with the same percentage requirements of a department store. Mail-order houses, other general merchandise (SIC 5961 pt.). These are mail-order houses selling a variety of merchandise but not meeting the criteria of a department store (see SIC 5311 for criteria). Mail-order houses, specialized (SIC 5961 pt.). These are mail-order houses which primarily sell a single item or a group of related items such as foods; apparel and accessories; computers and computer software; appliances, TV’s, audio equipment, furniture, floor coverings, kitchenware, and homefurnishings; books and stationery; proprietary medicines; antiques; used merchandise; sporting goods; silverware; cigars and cigarettes; cameras and photographic equipment; gifts and novelties; optical goods; leather goods; artists’ supplies; pet goods; hobby equipment; and toys and games. Sales of a single or related group of items must exceed 49 percent. Automatic merchandising machine operators (SIC 5962). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of products by automatic merchandising units (vending machines) which are generally located on the premises of other APPENDIX A A–11 JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 12 SESS: 37 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa businesses. This industry does not include coin-operated service machines such as washers and dryers (SIC 7215), music machines and amusement game machines (SIC 7993), lockers and scales (SIC 7299), or insurance policies sold through vending machines (SIC 63). The "establishment" is the location from which the vending route (or routes) is serviced, not the number of vending machines or the number of business locations in which vending machines are located. Direct selling establishments (SIC 5963). Establishments primarily engaged in selling merchandise by houseto-house canvass, by party plan, by telephone, or from trucks or wagons or other temporary locations. The ‘‘establishment’’ is the location from which the canvassers operate. Canvassers who do not have any paid help are excluded from the tabulations in this report. In some tabulations at the national level, direct selling organizations are divided into subclassifications on the basis of the merchandise they sell. The subclassifications are furniture, homefurnishings, and equipment; mobile food service; books and stationery; and other direct selling. Direct selling, furniture, homefurnishings, and equipment (SIC 5963 pt.). These are establishments primarily engaged in direct selling of furniture, baby furniture, floor coverings, draperies, curtains, china, glassware, kitchen utensils, cutlery, plastic housewares, brooms and brushes, lamps and shades, mirrors and pictures, venetian blinds and window shades, radios and television sets and parts, household appliances such as refrigerators and broilers, and other homefurnishings. Sales of these items must exceed 49 percent of total sales. Sellers of brushes and other cleaning aids are classified here. Sellers by the party plan where the salesperson conducts parties in order to assemble customers are also included here. Direct selling, mobile food service (SIC 5963 pt.). These are establishments primarily engaged in direct selling of food for immediate consumption such as sandwiches, soup, etc. Establishments primarily engaged in direct selling of food, not for immediate consumption, are classified in kind of business 596340. Direct selling, books and stationery (SIC 5963 pt.). These are establishments primarily engaged in direct selling of books, magazine subscriptions, encyclopedias, and stationery. Sales of these items must exceed 49 percent of total sales. Direct sellers of greeting cards and newspapers are classified in kind of business 596340. Direct selling, other (SIC 5963 pt.). These are direct selling establishments which sell merchandise not covered in above kind of businesses. Included are establishments selling building materials, hardware, and lawn and garden supplies; general merchandise; food (including frozen food and freezer plans) and the door-to-door delivery of dairy products (excluding prepared foods for immediate A–12 APPENDIX A consumption); apparel and accessories; cosmetics; proprietary medicines; used merchandise; sporting goods; jewelry; tobacco products; cameras and photographic equipment; gifts, novelties, and souvenirs; optical goods; leather goods; hobby equipment; religious articles; newspapers; greeting cards; and toys and games. Fuel oil dealers (SIC 5983). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of fuel oil. Establishments primarily selling fuel oil burners are classified in SIC 5074; dealers primarily engaged in installing and servicing fuel oil burners, in SIC 1711; and fuel oil burner repair service only, in SIC 7699. Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers (SIC 5984). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of bottled or bulk liquefied petroleum (LP) gas. Fuel dealers, not elsewhere classified (SIC 5989). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of coal, coke, charcoal, wood, or any combination of these lines. Establishments primarily selling fuel oil are classified in SIC 5983 and those primarily selling bottled gas in SIC 5984. Florists (SIC 5992). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of cut flowers and growing plants. Stores primarily engaged in the retail sale of seeds, bulbs, and nursery stock are classified in SIC 5261, and greenhouses and nurseries primarily engaged in growing seeds, bulbs, flowers, and nursery stock are classified in SIC 0181. Tobacco stores and stands (SIC 5993). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of cigarettes, cigars, tobacco, and smokers’ supplies. Many of the establishments included in this classification are operated as concessions in places of amusement, railway stations, airports, and other public places. News dealers and newsstands (SIC 5994). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of newspapers, magazines, and other periodicals. Home delivery of newspapers by other than printers or publishers is classified in SIC 5963. Establishments engaged in delivering newspapers for subsequent home delivery are classified in SIC 4212. Optical goods stores (SIC 5995). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of prescription eyeglasses and contact lenses for individuals. Offices of oculists, ophthalmologists and optometrists are classified in major group 80 even though a majority of their revenue is from the sale of eyeglass frames or prescription eyeglasses and contact lenses. Miscellaneous retail stores, not elsewhere classified (SIC 5999). Establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of specialized lines of merchandise, not elsewhere classified. This industry also includes establishments primarily engaged in selling a general line of their own or RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 13 SESS: 37 OUTPUT: Thu Sep 22 15:39:30 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/14apdxa consigned merchandise at retail or at auction. Establishments primarily engaged in auctioning tangible personal property of others on a fee basis are classified in SIC 7389. Pet shops (SIC 5999 pt.). These are retail stores selling pets such as dogs, cats, birds, rabbits, and tropical fish; pet foods and remedies. Aquariums, cages, pet toys, and aquatic plants are often sold in these types of stores. Many of these shops board pets on the premises. If receipts from the boarding of pets account for more than 49 percent of total receipts, the establishments are classified in Agriculture, Industry 075200 6. Art dealers (SIC 5999 pt.). These are retail establishments primarily engaged in the retail sale of art goods, including original oil paintings, sculptures, glassware items and ceramics, at retail or at auction. Establishments primarily selling supplies for making ceramic items are classified in kind of business 594520. Establishments primarily selling artists’ supplies are classified in kind of business 599990. Establishments primarily selling art reproductions are classified in Industry 571900. Other miscellaneous retail stores, not elsewhere classified (SIC 5999 pt.). These are retail stores, not elsewhere classified, which sell specialized lines such as artists’ supplies, above-ground swimming pools and supplies, orthopedic and artificial limbs, drafting materials, hearing aids, furniture polish, rubber stamps, monuments and tombstones, sanitary supplies (including disinfectants), seasonal decorations, artificial flowers and plants, fireworks, etc. Religious goods stores are classified here. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES APPENDIX A A–13 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_146 [ACEN,C_ARLEDGE] 10/25/94 12:24 PM MACHINE: EPCV22 DATA:VOL1_TIPS_APXB_01.TIPS;1 * 10/12/94 09:48:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 3 TSF:TIPS92-09482232.DAT;1 10/12/94 09:48:35 UTF:TIPS93-09482232.DAT;1 10/12/94 09:48:36 META:VOL1_TIPS96_APXB_01.DAT;6 10/12/94 09:49:15 Appendix C. Kind-of-Business Titles and Reporting-Form Numbers [Listed below are retail kind-of-business titles and their corresponding reporting-form numbers. Requests for copies of any of these forms, including the inquiries used to classify establishments by kind of business, should be directed to the Services Division, Bureau of the Census, Washington, DC 20233] SIC code Title Reporting form CBSIC code Title Reporting form CB- 52 5211 5231 5251 5261 5271 BUILDING MATERIALS AND GARDEN SUPPLIES STORES Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers 5201 5202 5203 5204 5205 57 5712 5713 5714 5719 5722 5731 5734 5735 5736 FURNITURE AND HOMEFURNISHINGS STORES Furniture stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores 5701 5704 5705 5705 5702 5702 5702 5703 5703 53 5311 pt. 5311 pt. 5311 pt. 5331 5399 GENERAL MERCHANDISE STORES Conventional department stores Discount or mass merchandising department stores National chain department stores Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores 5301 5301 5301 5302 5301 58 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 EATING AND DRINKING PLACES Restaurants Social caterers Cafeterias Refreshment places Contract feeding Ice cream and frozen yogurt shops Drinking places 5801 5801 5801 5801 5802 5801 5801 54 5411 5421 5431 5441 5451 5461 5499 FOOD STORES Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Retail bakeries Miscellaneous food stores 5400 5400 5400 5400 5400 5400 5400 59 5912 pt. 5912 pt. 5921 5932 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5942 5943 5944 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 5961 pt. 5961 pt. 5961 pt. 5962 5963 pt. 5963 pt. 5963 pt. 5963 pt. 5983 5984 5989 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. MISCELLANEOUS RETAIL STORES Drug stores Proprietary stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Stationery stores Jewelry stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Mail-order department store merchandise Mail-order other general merchandise Mail-order specialized merchandise Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling furniture, homefurnishings, and equipment Direct selling mobile food service Direct selling books and stationery Other direct selling Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Pet shops Art dealers Other retail stores, n.e.c. 5901 5901 5902 5903 5904 5904 5905 5906 5907 5908 5909 5906 5906 5910 5911 5911 5911 5802 5911 5911 5911 5911 5912 5912 5912 5913, 5917 5902 5902 5914 5915 5916 5916 55 5511 5521 5531 pt. 5531 pt. 5541 5551 5561 5571 5599 AUTOMOTIVE DEALERS AND GASOLINE SERVICE STATIONS New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto parts, tires and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Gasoline service stations Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. 5501 5501 5502 5502 5504 5503 5503 5503 5503 56 5611 5621 5631 5641 5651 5661 pt. 5661 pt. 5661 pt. 5661 pt. 5661 pt. 5699 APPAREL AND ACCESSORY STORES Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Family clothing stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores 5601 5601 5601 5601 5601 5602 5602 5602 5602 5602 5601 RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES APPENDIX C C–1 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 39 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 2 OUTPUT: Tue Nov 8 09:28:57 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/17/14apdxd Appendix D. Metropolitan Areas (Titles and definitions shown for MSA’s, CMSA’s, and PMSA’s are those established by the Office of Management and Budget, as of June 30, 1993) KANSAS Kansas City, MO-KS MSA Johnson County, KS Leavenworth County, KS Miami County, KS Wyandotte County, KS Cass County, MO Clay County, MO Clinton County, MO Jackson County, MO Lafayette County, MO Kansas City, MO-KS MSA—Con. Platte County, MO Ray County, MO Lawrence, KS MSA Douglas County, KS Topeka, KS MSA Shawnee County, KS Wichita, KS MSA Butler County, KS Harvey County, KS Sedgwick County, KS RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES APPENDIX D D–1 Appendix E. Percent of Sales Data Based on Administrative Records and Estimation for the State: 1992 [Includes only establishments with payroll. For meaning of abbreviations and symbols and for more information on reliability of data, see introductory text. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see appendix A] Percent of sales SIC code Kind of business From administrative records 1 16.5 21.0 19.9 19.8 20.6 29.9 19.9 15.8 .5 3 4 Percent of sales SIC code Kind of business From administrative records 1 12.8 10.4 16.4 17.5 7.0 11.3 9.8 (D) 1.8 (D) 10.3 1.8 15.0 9.0 18.5 23.0 26.8 25.6 33.6 34.9 11.9 24.8 18.6 20.0 17.4 12.8 20.9 26.0 25.1 31.2 8.2 23.1 12.1 44.6 30.6 30.4 63.1 25.9 55.3 37.9 21.3 28.7 31.7 26.7 13.5 22.0 20.4 62.2 8.2 1.8 34.0 17.0 14.7 9.4 4.2 14.8 16.9 32.6 38.9 31.7 – Estimated2 4.6 56 4.4 561 Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Other apparel and accessory stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Drug stores Proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Stationery stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Nonstore retailers Catalog and mail-order houses Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling establishments Fuel dealers Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Estimated2 5.0 12.5 6.9 7.0 6.5 1.7 4.4 (D) – (D) 7.0 .6 4.1 4.3 3.9 8.0 8.3 9.4 6.1 1.2 15.6 8.4 7.1 7.7 8.1 4.5 4.2 8.0 7.7 7.6 12.5 7.7 5.8 12.5 10.9 11.0 – 5.6 4.7 9.9 5.1 8.2 4.2 10.8 3.9 5.5 3.9 3.8 4.0 – 5.6 – 1.4 2.8 .4 3.0 7.3 10.0 14.9 9.2 – Retail trade 52 521, 3 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 531 531 pt. 531 pt. 531 pt. 533 539 54 541 541 pt. 541 pt. 541 pt. 541 pt. 542 546 546 pt. 546 pt. 543, 4, 5, 9 543 544 545 549 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 553 pt. 553 pt. 555, 6, 7, 9 555 556 557 559 554 554 pt. 554 pt. Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) Department stores (excl. leased depts.) Conventional 3 Discount or mass merchandising 3 National chain 3 562, 3 562 4.8 563 4.8 5.4 565 566 3.1 566 pt. 2.7 566 pt. 4.0 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. .1 564, 9 564 (D) 569 57 (D) 5712 (D) – 5713, 4, 9 – 5713 5714 5719 (D) .7 572 573 2.6 5731 5734 5735 2.5 5736 2.1 17.0 3.7 .6 58 (D) (D) (D) – – (D) 2.0 13.3 13.0 12.4 59.8 10.2 38.5 33.2 27.7 28.2 14.5 19.8 (D) 8.2 (D) 27.8 18.9 16.0 43.7 33.8 33.0 54.3 23.3 7.2 35.0 17.4 30.7 16.9 3.9 27.5 3 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Supermarkets and other general-line grocery stores Convenience food stores Convenience food/gasoline stores Delicatessens Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Retail bakeries Retail bakeries 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 7.9 5812 pt. 5813 baking and selling selling only 9.9 591 9.7 14.1 591 pt. 591 pt. 4.6 59 ex. 591 (D) 6.1 592 (D) 593 3.9 594 5941 5.3 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5.2 5942 5.3 5944 5943, 5, 6, 5.2 7, 8, 9 5.3 5943 2.2 5945 5946 5947 7.8 5948 19.5 5949 .4 9.7 596 6.0 5961 5962 5963 5.9 598 5983 2.9 5984 8.4 5989 Other food stores Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Miscellaneous food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. Gasoline service stations Gasoline/convenience food stores Other gasoline service stations and truck stops See footnotes at end of table. RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES APPENDIX E E–1 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 40 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Percent of sales SIC code Kind of business From administrative records 1 SIC code Estimated2 59 ex. 591 40.4 67.9 – 18.7 11.4 15.7 9.6 12.3 5999 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. Miscellaneous retail stores Con. Kind of business Percent of sales From administrative records 1 Estimated2 59 ex. 591 5992 5993 5994 5995 Miscellaneous retail stores Con. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores 1Includes 2Includes 3Includes 4Includes Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. Pet shops Art dealers Other miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 28.5 26.2 57.7 27.6 10.6 3.6 2.3 13.2 sales information obtained from administrative records of other Federal agencies. sales information which was imputed based on historic company ratios or administrative records, or on industry averages. sales from catalog order desks. data for leased departments operated within department stores. Data for this line not included in broader kind-of-business totals. E–2 APPENDIX E RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 41 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 4 OUTPUT: Tue Nov 8 09:29:04 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/17/14apdxf Appendix F. Geographic Notes KANSAS Bonner Springs is in Johnson and Wyandotte Counties. Herington is in Dickinson and Morris Counties; it annexed into Morris County in May 1986, but this change was not submitted to the Bureau of the Census until September 1987. Manhattan is in Pottawatomie and Riley Counties. Mulvane is in Sedgwick and Sumner Counties. RETAIL TRADE—GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES APPENDIX F F–1 Appendix G. Establishments in Business Any Time During Year and Establishments in Business at End of Year for the State: 1992 and 1987 [Includes only establishments with payroll. appendix A] For meaning of abbreviations and symbols, see introductory text. For explanation of terms and comparability of 1987 and 1992 censuses, see Establishments in business SIC code Kind of business Any time during year 1992 Retail trade 52 521, 3 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 531 531 pt. 531 pt. 531 pt. 533 539 54 541 542 546 546 pt. 546 pt. 543, 4, 5, 9 543 544 545 549 55 ex. 554 551 552 553 553 pt. 553 pt. 555, 6, 7, 9 555 556 557 559 554 56 561 562, 3 562 563 565 566 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 566 pt. 564, 9 564 569 Building materials and garden supplies stores Building materials and supply stores Lumber and other building materials dealers Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores Hardware stores Retail nurseries, lawn and garden supply stores Manufactured (mobile) home dealers General merchandise stores Department stores (incl. leased depts.) Department stores (excl. leased depts.) Conventional 1 Discount or mass merchandising 1 National chain 1 1 2 1 At end of year 1987 16 797 995 560 432 128 258 121 56 404 118 118 17 71 30 110 176 1 766 1 313 91 206 198 8 156 8 50 28 70 1 300 408 173 580 487 93 139 34 40 52 13 1 576 1 429 154 564 526 38 202 366 28 81 6 224 27 143 68 75 1992 14 817 796 423 321 102 218 107 48 361 125 125 14 84 27 107 129 1 393 1 052 64 160 153 7 117 7 33 11 66 1 099 307 210 470 441 29 112 33 31 37 11 1 325 1 156 120 458 401 57 187 274 16 46 2 168 42 117 46 71 1987 15 233 935 533 411 122 240 112 50 384 116 116 17 69 30 101 167 1 588 1 193 85 171 164 7 139 7 42 25 65 1 192 380 151 533 444 89 128 31 37 50 10 1 458 1 320 140 524 489 35 184 343 26 77 5 208 27 129 60 69 16 255 860 455 346 109 242 115 48 379 126 126 14 84 28 115 138 1 528 1 156 66 174 167 7 132 7 37 12 76 1 198 332 232 513 482 31 121 34 33 39 15 1 422 1 281 125 523 458 65 207 293 18 50 2 178 45 133 50 83 Variety stores Miscellaneous general merchandise stores Food stores Grocery stores Meat and fish (seafood) markets Retail bakeries Retail bakeries Retail bakeries Other food stores Fruit and vegetable markets Candy, nut, and confectionery stores Dairy products stores Miscellaneous food stores Automotive dealers New and used car dealers Used car dealers Auto and home supply stores Auto parts, tires, and accessories stores Home and auto supply stores Miscellaneous automotive dealers Boat dealers Recreational vehicle dealers Motorcycle dealers Automotive dealers, n.e.c. Gasoline service stations Apparel and accessory stores Men’s and boys’ clothing and accessory stores Women’s clothing and specialty stores Women’s clothing stores Women’s accessory and specialty stores Family clothing stores Shoe stores Men’s shoe stores Women’s shoe stores Children’s and juveniles’ shoe stores Family shoe stores Athletic footwear stores Other apparel and accessory stores Children’s and infants’ wear stores Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores See footnotes at end of table. baking and selling selling only RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES APPENDIX G G–1 TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 42 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 Establishments in business SIC code Kind of business Any time during year 1992 57 5712 5713, 4, 9 5713 5714 5719 572 573 5731 5734 5735 5736 58 5812 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5812 pt. 5813 591 591 pt. 591 pt. 59 ex. 591 592 593 594 5941 5941 pt. 5941 pt. 5942 5944 5943, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 5943 5945 5946 5947 5948 5949 596 5961 5962 5963 598 5983 5984 5989 5992 5993 5994 5995 5999 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 5999 pt. 1Includes 2Includes At end of year 1987 1 214 340 291 153 32 106 180 403 251 44 46 62 4 186 3 671 1 625 91 1 680 275 515 551 533 18 3 376 779 167 1 239 231 104 127 106 249 653 45 106 26 334 15 127 267 105 57 105 125 22 100 3 347 8 14 121 309 51 20 238 1992 1 089 319 296 151 26 119 132 342 188 53 53 48 4 148 3 661 1 501 74 1 801 285 487 444 428 16 3 006 538 207 1 121 217 64 153 119 225 560 36 98 9 304 11 102 293 88 61 144 87 8 79 – 309 7 6 109 329 48 29 252 1987 1 126 321 273 147 30 96 165 367 224 39 45 59 3 658 3 246 1 411 82 1 514 239 412 520 504 16 3 052 667 154 1 130 210 95 115 101 233 586 39 99 24 298 14 112 261 102 55 104 119 20 96 3 306 5 10 115 285 47 19 219 Furniture and homefurnishings stores Furniture stores Homefurnishings stores Floor covering stores Drapery, curtain, and upholstery stores Miscellaneous homefurnishings stores Household appliance stores Radio, television, computer, and music stores Radio, television, and electronics stores Computer and software stores Record and prerecorded tape stores Musical instrument stores Eating and drinking places Eating places Restaurants Cafeterias Refreshment places Other eating places Drinking places Drug and proprietary stores Drug stores Proprietary stores Miscellaneous retail stores Liquor stores Used merchandise stores Miscellaneous shopping goods stores Sporting goods stores and bicycle shops General line sporting goods stores Specialty line sporting goods stores Book stores Jewelry stores Other miscellaneous shopping goods stores Stationery stores Hobby, toy, and game shops Camera and photographic supply stores Gift, novelty, and souvenir shops Luggage and leather goods stores Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores Nonstore retailers Catalog and mail-order houses Automatic merchandising machine operators Direct selling establishments Fuel dealers Fuel oil dealers Liquefied petroleum gas (bottled gas) dealers Fuel dealers, n.e.c. Florists Tobacco stores and stands News dealers and newsstands Optical goods stores Miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. Pet shops Art dealers Other miscellaneous retail stores, n.e.c. 1 183 343 318 159 27 132 146 376 207 61 57 51 4 608 4 048 1 677 82 1 970 319 560 476 460 16 3 320 604 224 1 232 237 68 169 134 244 617 37 107 10 340 12 111 312 96 64 152 101 11 90 – 342 8 7 122 368 56 30 282 sales from catalog order desks. data for leased departments operated within department stores. Data for this line not included in broader kind-of-business totals. G–2 APPENDIX G RETAIL TRADE GEOGRAPHIC AREA SERIES TIPS [UPF] BATCH_221 [UFCB,B_LAMBERT] UFCB 11/ 8/94 10:41 AM MACHINE: EPCV24 DATA:R_KS_TIPS.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:00 TAPE: NOreel FRAME: 43 TSF:R_KS_TIPS92.DAT;1 11/ 7/94 15:35:37 UTF:R_KS_TIPS93.DAT;2 11/ 8/94 07:14:11 META:R_KS_TIPS96.DAT;1 11/ 8/94 07:18:29 JOBNAME: No Job Name PAGE: 1 SESS: 24 OUTPUT: Tue Jul 12 15:22:00 1994 /pssw01/disk2/economic/rc92a/0/16bcvr Publication Program 1992 CENSUS OF RETAIL TRADE Publications of the 1992 Census of Retail Trade, containing data on retail establishments in the United States, are described below. Publications order forms for specific reports may be obtained from any Department of Commerce district office or from Data User Services Division, Customer Services , Bureau of the Census, Washington, DC 20233-8300. The first results were issued in press releases. Final detailed statistics are issued in separate paperbound reports and compact disc-read only memory (CD-ROM). for the United States by major kind of business. Operating expenses include annual payroll, supplemental labor costs, purchased services, etc. Receipts data also are provided. The Merchandise Line Sales report (RC92-S-3) presents data on major categories of merchandise sold by retail kinds of business for each State and the District of Columbia, each MA, and the United States as a whole. Data for States and MA’s will be available on electronic media only. Tables present data for establishments with payroll for each kind of business and show, for each merchandise line, the number of establishments handling the line and their sales of the line; the percentage of total sales of the kind of business accounted for by each of the lines carried; and, for establishments actually handling a specific line, the percentage of their total sales represented by sales of that line. Summary statistics also are provided for the 43 broad merchandise line categories, including counts of establishments and the amount and percentage of the line sold by various kinds of retail businesses. The Miscellaneous Subjects report (RC92-S-4) contains special statistics on eating and drinking places, gasoline service stations, shoe stores, optical goods stores, and other miscellaneous subjects. Data are presented for the United States as a whole and, where feasible, for States and MA’s. Final Reports Geographic area series—52 reports (RC92-A-1 to -52) A separate paperbound report containing data for establishments with payroll is published for each State, the District of Columbia, and the United States. Each report presents general statistics for establishments with payroll including number of establishments, sales, payroll, and employment by varied retail classifications. All statistics are presented for the State, metropolitan areas (MA’s), counties, and places with 2,500 inhabitants or more. Greater kind-of-business detail is shown for larger areas. For each State, the District of Columbia, and the United States, 1992 data are provided by kind of business on sales and employees per establishment and sales and payroll per employee. Comparative statistics showing percent changes in sales and payroll between 1987 and 1992 are shown by kind of business. Special report series—1 report (RC92-SP-1) The Selected Statistics report presents selected data for establishments with and without payroll for 1992 and 1987 by kind of business. Data include number of establishments, sales, payroll and employment, and selected ratios and rankings. Data are presented for the United States as a whole and for States and MA’s. Nonemployer statistics series—1 report (RC92-N-1) This report includes number of establishments and sales by kind of business for all establishments, establishments with payroll, and establishments without payroll for the United States and States. Data on sales size of establishments without payroll and the number of proprietorships and partnerships is also provided for the United States. Also presented are statistics for establishments without payroll including number of establishments and sales by varied retail classifications for MA’s. Similar data for counties and places with 2,500 inhabitants or more are available on electronic media only. Electronic Media All data included in the printed reports are available on CD-ROM. The CD-ROM’s provide the same information found in the final reports as well as additional information not published in the final reports such as ZIP Code statistics available from series RC92-Z, merchandise line sales statistics for States and MA’s from series RC92-S, and nonemployer data for counties and places from series RC92-N. Electronic media products are available for users who wish to summarize, rearrange, or process large amounts of data. These products, with corresponding technical documentation, are sold by Data User Services Division, Customer Services, Bureau of the Census, Washington, DC 20233-8300. Subject series—4 reports (RC92-S-1 to -4) The Establishment and Firm Size report (RC92-S-1) presents data for establishments with payroll, based on size of establishment, size of company or firm, and legal form of organization. Establishment statistics are presented by sales size and by employment size; statistics for firms by sales size (including concentration by largest firms), by employment size, and by number of establishments operated (single units and multiunits). Statistics are presented by kind of business on the number of establishments, sales, payroll, and employment for the United States. The Measures of Value Produced, Capital Expenditures, Depreciable Assets, and Operating Expenses report (RC92-S-2) presents data on measures of value produced, capital expenditures, depreciable assets, and operating expenses for firms with payroll OTHER ECONOMIC CENSUS REPORTS Data on wholesale trade, service industries, transportation, communications, utilities, financial, insurance, real estate, construction industries, manufactures, mineral industries, enterprise statistics, minority-owned business enterprises, and women-owned businesses also are available from the 1992 Economic Census. A separate series of reports covers the census of outlying areas: Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands of the United States, Guam, and the Northern Marianas. Separate announcements describing these reports are available free of charge from Data User Services Division, Customer Services , Bureau of the Census, Washington, DC 20233-8300.

Related docs
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Alaska
Views: 68  |  Downloads: 0
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Colorado
Views: 51  |  Downloads: 0
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Wyoming
Views: 46  |  Downloads: 0
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Iowa
Views: 53  |  Downloads: 0
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Hawaii
Views: 40  |  Downloads: 0
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Vermont
Views: 65  |  Downloads: 0
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Arizona
Views: 44  |  Downloads: 0
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Delaware
Views: 35  |  Downloads: 0
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Maryland
Views: 42  |  Downloads: 0
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Nebraska
Views: 38  |  Downloads: 0
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Alabama
Views: 59  |  Downloads: 0
1992 Census-Retail Trade_Area Series_ Georgia
Views: 55  |  Downloads: 0
Other docs by Lisa Baker
UNIVERSIDAD DE LOS ANDES
Views: 1204  |  Downloads: 8
UNIDAD SEGUNDA
Views: 969  |  Downloads: 6
Tocar hoy vive para la eternidad
Views: 701  |  Downloads: 2
Timbres Fiscales
Views: 1324  |  Downloads: 0
TÉRMINOS DE REFERENCIA
Views: 829  |  Downloads: 14
Taller de Escalada
Views: 686  |  Downloads: 2
SUB-DIRECCION DE DEFENSA DEL TRABAJADOR
Views: 2773  |  Downloads: 2
SOLICITUD Y FORMULARIO DE VERIFICACIÓN
Views: 704  |  Downloads: 1
SOLICITUD VISA L
Views: 768  |  Downloads: 0
SOLICITUD DE
Views: 507  |  Downloads: 0