248
Modern Business Geography
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UNITED STATES
DISTRIBUTION OF
POPULATION
a:
; 10d
Fig. 164. The region marked A has a population of 80 or more to the square mile; B, between
30 and 40 to the square mile; C, 40 and 10; D, below 10. The circles give the number to the
square mile in the different states. Which state has the highest figure? the lowest? What two
regions are marked C? From this map and the map on the opposite page, where should you ex-
pect the railway network to be closest? Verify your answer by reference to Figure 128, page
176. Are the states of the wheat belt and the corn belt among the most populous?
smith shops and repair shops, are needed even in farming regions to
keep all kinds of machinery and tools in repair. Sawmills are needed
to supply building material, and gristmills to grind the grain which is
grown almost everywhere. Each city must also have bakeries, for
people demand fresh bread and pastry. Gas for lighting and heating
is usually produced locally, because the coal from which it is made can
be transported and stored more cheaply than can the gas, which re-
quires special pipes and tanks. All modern cities and many small
towns also have electric light plants to provide power both for lighting
and for trolley lines, and for use in small shops and homes. These
universal manufacturing industries, as we may call them, form a large
part of the manufacturing in the more lightly shaded areas of Figure
165, and are of great importance in the heavily shaded areas where other
types of manufacturing are also prominent.
MANUFACTURING TN NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
The northeastern quarter of the United States adds to these univer-
sal industries many others, which differ greatly from place to place.
More than 30 per cent of all the gainfully employed workers in the
states from Maine and Marvland westward to the Mississippi River