INDEX. t< 7 



Bulletin 



Fly — N o. Pag«« 



Mediterranean fruit, ravages in Hawaii 49 1 1 , 5, 7 



melon — 



control, natural and artificial 49 1 45-54 



economic importance in Hawaii 491 7-8 



in Hawaii, tnilletin by E. A. Back and C. E. Pember- 



ton 491 1-64 



life history, habits, life cycle, seasonal history, and 



spread 491 18-45 



literature and bibliography 491 5-7, 57-04 



Folklore, bees, note 489 10 



Fom.es spp, cause of slash rot, Arkansas 496 8, 1 1 



Food, farm family, amount contributed by farm, Georgia 492 16 



Forest — 



Arkansas National, slash rotting, investigations 496 3-13 



Ozark National, slash rotting, investigations 496 3-13 



Sante Fe National, occurrence of western red-rot in yellow 



pine and black jack, data 490 5-7 



seedlings, requirements for reforestation on National 



forests 479 1 



Forests — ■ 



community, value in United States and foreign coun- 

 tries 481 27-28 



injuries by gipsv moth, and control studies and experi- 

 ments ." 484 1-16 



management for control of Gipsy moth, bulletin by G. E. 



Clement and Willis Munro 484 1-54 



National, nursery practice, bulletin by C. R. Tillotson... 479 1-86 



nursery operations, costs 479 86 



slash and litter, relation to fires 496 1-2 



[35, 36, 37, 43, 



Fort Bayard Nursery, New Mexico, practices, shading 479 ■{ 47, 49, 50, 61 , 



( 66, 69, 85 



Foulbrood, American, occurrence in North Carolina 489 4-5 



Founder, horse, symptoms, effect on feet 487 28 



Frames, seed-bed, descriptisn 479 30-31, 37-39 



France, fruits, production, imports and exports 483 20-22 



Freight rates, cotton, North Carolina 476 1 5 



Frosts — 



injury to nursery stock, prevention 479 72-73 



killing, last and first. Eastern Oregon, Moro substation, 



1911-1915 ' 498 10 



Frothingham, E. H., bulletin on "The status and value of 



farm woodlots in the eastern United States." 481 1-44 



Fruit- 

 covering for protection from melon fly 491 54 



fly, Mediterranean, ravages in Hawaii 491 1, 5, 7 



products, farm and factory output, 1909 483 5-6 



trade, 1910, 1915 483 6-7 



Fruits — 



deciduous, crop of 1909 483 2 



exports. ] 910, 1915 483 7 



imports, 1910, 1915 483 7 



production of different kinds, 1909 483 2-6 



statistics in principal countries, bulletin bv H. D. Rud- 



diman : 483 1-40 



tree, injury by melon fly, Hawaii 491 16 



tropical and subtropical', crop of 1909 483 2 



Fuel- 

 farm consumption, in eight States 481 35-36 



heating value of wood, comparison with coal 481 36-37 



Fungi — 



slash-rotting, Arkansas and Ozark National Forests 496 3-4, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11 



wood-rotting, growth '. 496 9-10 



