6 Yearboojc of the Department of Agrictdture, 1921. 



IV. The Farms and the People. 



Page. 



Number of farms, total and of classified sizes 83, 84 



Average acreage of improved land per farm 85 



Value of farm laud per acre 86 



Value of farm property, and of buildings, machinery, and live stock 87-89 



Expenditures for feed, fertilizer, and labor 89, 90 



Average value of farms 91 



Kelutive importance of tenancy from standpoints of proportion of the 

 farms, of the improved land, and of the value of farm property oper- 

 ated by tenants 92, 93 



Number of farms operated by white and negro owners and tenants 94, 95 



Country, village, and city population 96-98 



Farms having tractors, automobiles, telephones, and water piped into the 

 house 99-100 



tEADING CITIES. 



Fig. 1. — This map should be used in counection with all the maps that follow when it 

 is desired to determine the name of a State. The succeeding maps do not show State 

 names, because the letters would interfere with the dots or shading, but the State 

 boundaries are shown and the shape of these boundaries, or location of the State on the 

 map, should be compared with this map to identify the State. The map also shows the 

 location of the 30 largest cities, the names corresponding to the numbers being given in 

 the lower left-hand corner of the map. 



