The answer is 9 1/3 <--(one third) cents per ounce (in fraction form).
In Canada 15 cents
6 Ounces. If 2 lbs cost 5.92 then the cost is 18.5 cents per ounce. Divide 111 cents by 18.5 and the answer is 6 Ounces. That is assuming USD.
27 cents an ounce
2 cents
16 ouncesLast night when the market closed, it was worth almost 50 cents, but more than 49 cents,U.S.16 oz
12 ounces for 5 cents
In Canada 15 cents
In 1934 Pepsi begins selling a 12-ounce bottle for five cents, the same price charged by its competitors for six ounces.
Maybe 10 to 30 cents per bottle.
If you are referring to "Soda Pop", or a carbonated beverage then in the United States it was 5 cents. The bottle however had to be returned. At a "Soda Fountain" it was 5 cents, and the portion was smaller.
small bottle - 8 cents large bottle - 12 cents (this included 2cent bottle deposit) 'large' was 10-12 fl. oz. depending on soda brand (mid-fifties - Canada)
60 cents to 75 cents for a can $1.00 to $3.00 for a bottle all depending on where you get it
1
6.5 ounces were .05 cents
1965 a coke cost about 10 to 15 cents--A quarter would buy a bottle of coke and a bag of Lays chips
6 Ounces. If 2 lbs cost 5.92 then the cost is 18.5 cents per ounce. Divide 111 cents by 18.5 and the answer is 6 Ounces. That is assuming USD.
NexTag shows price comparisons of Angel perfume by Thierry Mugler in a bottle of 1.7 ounces at Luxury Perfume for a price of seventy-two dollars and ninety cents.