lM2 



MANUrACTUBES OF KUSSIA. 



GOVERNMENTS. 



Number of match 

 factories. 



In 1887. 



In 1888. 



In 1888 

 less. 



The northern (Archangel, Vologda, Novgorod, Olonets, 

 Pskov) 



The eastern (Viatka, Kazan, Perm, Samara, Ufa) . 



The central m an ufac tu ring (Vladimir, Kaluga, 

 Kostroma, Nizhni-Novgorod, Smolensk, Tver, Yaroslav). 



The central Chernoziom (Kursk, Orel, Penza, 

 Riazan, Saratov, Simbirsk, Tambov) 



Little Russia (Poltava, Kharkov, Chernigov) . . . . 



The Baltic (Courland, Livonia, Esthonia) 



The north-western (Vilna, Vitebsk, Grodno, Kovno, 

 Minsk, Moghilev) 



The south-western ( V^olyn, Kiev, Podolsk) . . . , 



Poland = 



Transcaucasia 



26 



75 



63 



109 

 14 

 11 



25 

 3 



12 

 1 



21 

 55 



52 



79 



11 



9 



17 



2 



11 



5 

 20 



11 



30 



Total 



339 



257 



82 



luents producing the greater part of tlie former, (13,725,360,000) and the north- 

 ern governments, the greater part of the latter, (5,610,586,000). Phosphorus, being 

 one of the principal materials used in the manufacture, is w^orked to a suf- 

 ficient extent in Russia itself. During the period from 1889 to 1890 there were 

 ten factories for the production of phosphorus, nearly all of them centred in the eastern 

 and northern regions, one only being- in the western part of Siberia, in Tumen ; their 

 total yield of phosphorus reached 11,386 pouds, including 10,740 pouds, 94.4 per cent, 

 of white, and 646 pouds, 5.6 per cent, of red phosphorus. 



The distribution of the product was as shown in the following table. 



GOVERNMENTS OF 



Number of 



TACrORIES. 



Quantity op phosporus produced. 



White. 



Red. 



Total. 



Pouds. 



Vologda 



Novgorod 



Perm 



V^ladimir 



Kaluga 



Total 



1 

 1 

 6 

 1 

 1 



10 



697 

 140.6 



9,808 



4 



91 



10,740.6 



642 



646 



701 



340.6 



10,450 



4 



91 



11,386.6 



