G04 APPENDIX. 



Burbank Fruit Association, Burbank. 



Manzana Fruit Association. 



San Gabriel Fruit Association, San Gabriel. 



Duarte Fruit Association, Duarte. 



North Pomona Fruit Association, North Pomona. 



San Jacinto Fruit Association, San Jacinto. 



Perris Fruit Association, Perris. 



Anaheim Fruit Association, Anaheim. 



Filhnore Fruit Association,, FiUmore. 



Cucamonga Fruit Association, Cucamonga. 



Fallbrook Fruit Association, Fallbrook, 



(The societies selling through the Southern California Deciduous Fruit 

 Exchanges were all organized in 1898. Owing to the drought of that year 

 some of them had no fruit to sell, and have, therefore, never yet actually 

 transacted business. At the present time other organizations are forming, and 

 the central organization also handles the fruit of some individual growers.) 



Walnut Market'mg Associations. 



Los Nietos and Kanchita Walnut-Growers' Association, Rivera. 



Mountain View "Walnut-Growers' Association, El Monte. 



Santa Ana Yalley Walnut-Growers' Association, Santa Ana. 



Saticoy Walnut-Growers' Association, Santa Paula. 



Santa Barbara Walnut-Growers' Association, Santa Barbara. 



FuUerton Walnut-Growers' Association, Fullerton. 



Golden Belt Fruit Company, Fullerton. 



(The Golden Belt Company, and possibly others, also handle citrus fruits. 

 The walnut-growers' associations annually meet and agree upon a common 

 scale of prices, to which all adhere. The associations control the walnut 

 market, subject to the competition of imported walnuts.) 



Raisins. 



California Raisin-Growers' Association, Fresno. 



Wine. 



California Wine-Makers' Corporation, Crocker Building, San Francisco. 



Fresh Fruits. 



Contra Costa Fruit-Growers' Union, Martinez. 

 Florin Fruit-Growers' Association, Florin. 



Honey. 



California Beekeepers' Exchange, Lang. 



The most important cooperative societies of farmers outside the United 

 States are the " Agricultural Syndicates " of France. These, in the main, are 

 societies for the purchase of supplies, especially fertilizers, and of farm 

 machinery for rental to the members. Some of them also do more or less 

 marketing. The aggregate membership of these societies is very large, but I 



