PBODUCTION OF INDIAN COBN 



11 



7. Production by sections, and market movement. — The 



following summary, together with Fig. 2, gives a definite 

 idea of the relative production in different sections of the 

 country, and also the comparative market movement. 

 The available data is corn shipped out of the county where 

 grown, and does not always mean that the corn leaves 

 the state, but indicates the surplus corn in the hands of 

 growers. Most of the lesser corn states consume more 

 corn than they raise, while in the principal corn-belt, most 

 of the corn put on the market leaves the state, and is 

 utilized in manufacturing corn products or shipped to other 

 regions : — 



TABLE VIII 



Table showing Percentage op Entire Corn Crop pro- 

 duced BT Each Grand Division op the United States 

 AND THE Market Movement. 5-Year Average, 1906- 

 1910, Inclusive 



