STATE FARMS 120 PER CENT RICHERSUBSTANTIAL INCREASE SHOWN IN VALUATION IN TEN-YEAR PERIOD.SMALL HOLDINGS THE RULEMore Than Half of the Farmers of the State Are Operating on Less Than Seventy Acres, According to the Report of Mr. Page.(’on way.—The eleventh biennial report of John H Paso, commissioner of mitie3, manufactures and agriculture, sum-marl ing the work of the department in 191 it 14. is being issued by a local printing company and the entire edition will be placed with the department in a few days.fnder agricultural statistics, the re-i rt shows that Arkansas ranks twenty fifth in population among the t ites ef the union and twenty-sixth m land ana. The average value of farm land in 1910. the report shows. w.k 114 1per acre, an increase of 5, M for the 10 year period. The most valuable agricultural lands are in Mississippi county, with an average \ aluw of |44 41 per acre, and the cheapest in Newton county, averaging 14 90 per acre.r ■ I —_ _ • ... ...a . .1 1 _ _ ___