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Page 



g. — The Co-operative Production and Sale of Raisins in 



California lo 16-18 



10. — Co-operative Bull Associations 11 13-15 



II.— The Essentials of Successful Co-operative Fruit and 



Vegetable Canneries 11 15-17 



12. — A Co-operative Cheese Manufacturing and Marketing 



Association in Tillamook Country in Oregon ... 12 20-2,4 



13. — The California Federation of Farmers' Co-operative 



Marketing Associations 12 51-52 



II. — Insurance and Thrift. 



1 . — State Hail Insxirance in North Dakota 2 41 -49 



2. — The General Conditions of Insurance Against Fire and 



the Development of Mutual Insurance 



3. — ■ Insurance against Frost in Iowa 



4. — Mutual Agricultural Insurance against Windstorms in 



Illinois 



5. — The Unfavourable Results of In.surance against Hail 



1916 



6. — The Organization of Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance 



Companies 



7. — Mutual Insurance against Fire in Massachusetts . . . 



III. — Credit. 



1. — Federal Banks and Financial Organization 



2. — Determination of Federal Land feank Districts. . . . 



3. — The Subscription of the Capital of the Federal Land 



Banks 



4. — The First Year of the Federal Farm Loan Act .... 



5. — The Federal Land Bank of Barkeley, California, and 



Loans •n Orchards 



6. — The Activity of the Federal Land Bank of St. Louis. . 



IV. — Agrarian EconoDiy in General. 



I. — Overtime in the Fruit and Vegetable Canning and 



Packing Industry of Oregon 2 125-126 



2. — Farm Tenancy in the United States, by Prof. Benjamin 



H. Hibbard, University of Wisconsin 



3. — Land Settlement in California . . .• 



4. — Land Tenure and the Orgaiuzation of Agriculture on 



Indian Reservations in the United States 



5 . — The Regulation o4" the Fruit Trade 



6.^ — ■ Interior Colonization in California 



7. — The Rise in the Value of Improved Farm Land . . . 



