The Bulletin. 15 



Louisiana 54.8 



Nebraska 52.9 



Maine 47.1 



New York 45.8 



West Virginia 41.8 



Iowa 40.9 



Colorado 40.5 



New Jersey 39.6 



Pennsylvania 38.1 



New Mexico ; 37.1 



Utah 34.0 



Kansas 32.8 



Texas 32.5 



Massachusetts , 31.3 



Connecticut 29.6 



Vermont 26.9 



Rhode Island 26.3 



District of Columbia 22.0 



New Hampshire 12.8 



MANUFACTURED PRODUCTS. 



In 1904 the State of ISTorth Carolina liad 3,272 manufacturing estab- 

 lishments, which gave employment to an average of 93,142 persons dur- 

 ing the year and paid $25,170,000 in salaries and vs^ages. In 1909 there 

 were 49,931 manufacturing establishments, giving employment to 

 133,453 persons and paying out during the year $41,259,000 in salaries 

 and wages. This shows the rate at which manufacturing enterprises are 

 increasing in this State. The value of the total manufactured products 

 of the State in 1910 was $216,656,000, which was over $13,500,000 more 

 than Georgia, our closest competitor in the South. The following table 

 will show at a glance how ISTorth Carolina ranks as a manufacturing 

 state. While it is not the first in value of manufactured products it is 

 ahead of a great many others. 



Table No. 7. — Showing Rank of North Carolina in Manufactured 

 Products as Compared with Other States in 1910. 



North Carolina $216,656,000 



Georgia 202,863,000 



Nebraska 199,019,000 



Tennessee 180,217,000 



Maine 176,029,000 



New Hampshire 164,581,000 



West Virginia 161,950,000 



Alabama , 145,962,000 



Colorado 130,044,000 



South Carolina 113,236,000 



Oregon 93,005,000 



Mississippi 80,555,000 



Arkansas 74,916,000 



Montana 73,272,000 



Florida 72,890,000 



Vermont 68,310,000 



Utah 61,989,000 



Oklahoma 53,682,000 



Delaware 52,840,000 



Arizona ^0,267,000 



District of Columbia 25,289,000 



Idaho 22,400,000 



North Dakota 19,138,000 



