484 



STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE, 



ments and livestock totals 169,226,085, an increase of 134 per cent over 

 that of 1910. In 1910 the value of livestock was $4,106,324; in 1920 

 the total was |10,346,027, an increase of 150 per cent. The above figures 

 indicate a healthy development and are an index of what can be ex- 

 pected in the future. 



TABLE 1 DATA SHOWING A GENERAL SUMMARY OF THE VALUE OF ALL FARM 



PROPERTY AS INDICATED BY AVERAGE VALUE PER FARM AND AVERAGE 

 VALUE PER ACRE. 



Fig. 4. One of the beautiful roads for which Cloverland is noted. 



There is in the Upper Peninsula, an area of 10,702,240 acres, of which 

 1,181,000 acres are in farms, approximately 1,500,000 acres in Jack 

 Pine plains, 2,700,000 acres in swamp land, and 1,100,000 in cut-over 

 forest land not in farms, leaving a balance of 4,221,240 acres covered 

 with forests. 



