ANSWER:
The South’s production of manufactured goods did not measure up to the Northern goods; both the north and south were impacted by the new industries. Because the rate of which people were buying and consuming cigarettes was increasing, the production of machine made-cigarettes in the 1880's helped improves the South production of manufactured goods. Even though Industrialists were trying to change the production of goods in the South from agriculture to factories the South was still very rural making it hard for the South to make any progress. The "new South" was something that Henry Grady, the editor of the Atlanta Constitution, tried to create because of his enthusiasm for the success of the South. The railroad lines were not in the favor for the southerners. Many of the lines that helped transport manufactured goods around the Nation did go south of the North, but in the opposite direction of where many of the raw materials made in the South came from.
Step-by-step explanation:
The production of goods manufactured in the South were not as good as the ones manufactured in the North, this had a great impact on the new industries in both the regions. The consumption and buying rate of cigarettes was on an increasing trend, the cigarettes made by machines became quote helpful for the south manufactured goods. The New South was something coined by Henry Grady. The reason that it only became a slogan was that the railroad lines were not favorable for the people living in the southern region and were not able to go from south to North where the raw material were supposed to get transported to.