INDEX 



363 



Farmers' Mutual Benefit Association, 



304- 



Farmers' party, see Independent party 

 movement. 



Farmers' Union (Calif.), 249. 



Farmers' Union (Lawrenceville, 111.), 3 23. 



Farmers' Union (La.), 304. 



Farmer's Union (Minneapolis), adver- 

 tises Grange, 46; bibliography, 326. 



Farmer's Vindicator (Jackson, Miss.), 

 326. 



Farmers' Vindicator and Cooperative 

 News (New Orleans, La.), 325. 



Farmers' War: Letter from the Western 

 States, 338. 



Feast of Pomona, Grange festival, 280. 



Fenton, H. T., American Politics, 330. 



Fertilizers, extend area of cotton produc- 

 tion, 28. Grange purchases, 248, 252. 



" Few Words to Railroad Moralists," 



345- 



Field, Justice, dissenting opinion in 

 Granger cases, 206, 209, 211. 



Fink, Albert, Cost of Railroad Trans- 

 portation, 343. 



Fire insurance, Grange, 272. 



First annual session National Grange, 

 47, 241. 



Fite, E. D., Social and Industrial Condi- 

 tions in the North during the Civil War, 



33i. 



Flagg, W. C., president Illinois State 

 Farmers' Association, 75; opposes 

 currency inflation, 95; states object of 

 Northwestern Farmers' Convention, 

 220; appears before Windom Com- 

 mittee, 221. 



Fleming, W. L., Civil War and Recon- 

 struction in Alabama, 335. 



Florida, Grange statistics, 58 ff., 59; 

 state grange organized, 63; Grange 

 agency, 252; bibliography, 322. 



Florida Agriculturist (De Land), 322. 



Florida Patron, 322. 



Flower, F. A., " Cooperation in the 

 United States and Cooperation in 

 Wisconsin," 350; Life of M. H. Car- 

 penter, 348. 



Folwell, W. W., Minnesota, 334. 



Fond du Lac County (Wis.) Pomona 



Grange, 321. 



Foreign population, in West (1880), 27. 

 Foster, F. J., " Grange and Cooperative 



Enterprises in New England," 350. 

 " Founders " of Grange, 41-44; lose 



interest, 45; meet as National Grange, 



47; attend sixth session National 



Grange, 57. 

 Fox River (Wis.), Grange advocates 



improvement, 112. 

 Fredonia (N. Y.), 47. 

 Frontier, advance of (1860-80), 24. 

 Fuller, E. N., editor People's Paper, 323. 



Garden City Grange, Chicago, 45, 48. 



Garner, J. W., Reconstruction in Missis- 

 sippi, 335- 



Garretson, " Sister," addresses National 

 Grange, 299. 



Garretson, N. W., organizes granges, 60. 



Gear, Governor (la.), on effects of 

 Granger law, 232 note 4. 



Geeslin, A. W., ed., Exposition of the 

 Grange, 337. 



" General Regulation Act," 346. 



George, Milton, starts Northwestern 

 Farmers' Alliance, 305. 



Georgetown (D. C.), sixth session Na- 

 tional Grange, 57. 



Georgia, railroad regulation, 202, 203; 

 bibliography, 322. 



Georgia Patrons of Husbandry, early 

 correspondence, 50; first granges, 56; 

 statistics, 58 ff.; growth, 59; state 

 grange organized, 63; decline, 69; 

 business agencies, 253; cooperative 

 stores, 264. 



Gladden, Washington, " Embattled 

 Farmers," 337. 



" Good and Bad Grangers," 348. 



Goodwin, T. S., The Grange, 337. 



Gordon, J. H., Illinois Railway Legisla- 

 tion, 347. 



Gracchus Americanus (pseud.), The 

 Grange, 337. 



Graham liquor law (Wis.), 92. 



