Graphic Methods for Presenting Facts
In Fig. 43, the two locomotives are placed neck and neck, but the whole chart reads backwards in that it reads to the left instead of to the right. Turn the page over and hold it up to the light. Through the back of the paper, the arrangement of the cars appears from left to right as it should.
lavo
I880
I900
5.7
242 = too >;
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PRODUCTION I EXPORT
UPPER riGURES
MILLIONS OF BALES LOWER FIGURES
MILLIONS OF DOLLARS
7.3 308 = t00y„ 4.9 ,
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Fig. 44. Yearly Cotton Production and Export of the United States. The Figures with the Arrows Show the Number of Millions of Bales and also the Value in Millions of Dollars
If horizontal bars are used to represent years, the earliest year should be shown at the top as seen here
No data are given in Fig. 43, and it is impossible to tell whether the comparison between 1901 and 1912 should be based on the ratios of the whole length, including engines, or whether it should be based on the lengths for cars only. A ratio without the engines would be much larger than with engines. This chart is accordingly unreliable. The difficulty in regard to engines being included in the drawing could be entirely overcome if the freight cars were made in solid black, with the engines shown in outline only, so that the eye could judge the ratio between the solid black bars representing freight cars without including the outline drawings of the engines.