439 



Forestry in Hong-kong, 301. 



— _ West Africa, 393. 

 Forests, utility of, 134. 

 France, destrnction of rats aud mice, 299. 

 Fraxinus cliinensis, wliite wax from, 334. 

 Freeman, W.G., Nature Teaching, 381. 

 French Guinea, exports of rubber, 204. 



— -— , trade of, 88. 



— Indo-Cliina, pepper cultivation, 332. 



— West Indies, sugar industry in, 291. 

 Fruit as food, 68. 

 — , carriage of, 84. 



— , economic relation of birds to, 299. 

 — , food value of, 4. 

 — , gathering for market, 212. 

 — , grading and packing, .52. 



— growing in Jamaica, 100. 



— — — ■ Mexico, 116. 

 . — — — Porto liico 264. 

 — , handling and packing, 181. 

 — , imports into the U.S.A., 340. 

 — , Jamaica, in Baltimore, 188. 

 — , marketing, 308. 

 — , picking and packing, 332. 

 — , selection for export, 132. 

 — , temperate, in West Indies, -5.5. 



— trade, Bahamas, 260. 



— — , Barbados, 86, 113. 



— ~, Trinidad, 33. 



— trees, ants on, 330. 



— — , road-side planting of, 413. 

 — , Trinidad for London exhibition, 388. 

 — , tropical, in England, 52. 

 - — , West Indian in Canada, 286, 302, 



350, 382, 397. 

 — , — — — London, 244. 

 — , — — — United Kingdom, 



268. 



— , wrapping, 343. 

 Fungi and plant diseases, 209. 



— — scale insects, 325. 

 — , insect-attacking, 13-5. 

 Fungicide.s, 214. 



— , prejiaration of, 210. 



Fungoid pests, cacao, 281. 



Fungus parasites, rendering plants im- 

 mune against, 56. 



Fiuitumia elastica, in Gold Coast Colony, 

 3.55. 



Fusarium of English potato, 199. 



— — tobacco, 199. 



G. 



Galbatree, 21.5, 332. 

 , — — , as wind-break, 274. 

 Gambia, cotton cultivation in, 341. 

 — , exports of, 354. 

 — , ground nut cultivation in, 323. 

 Gardner, F.D., Annual report Porto Pico 



Agricultural Experiment Station, 349. 

 — , cotton in Porto Rico, 389. 

 Garton, Hill & Co., cassava for glucose 



manufacture, 148, 162. | 



Geology and agriculture, 3. 

 Germany, ex^iorts of sugar from, 402. 

 Gilzean, A.H., Agriculture in Peru, 3. 

 Ginger, cultivation in Central African 



Protectorate, 28. 

 - - in London market, .'iO, 61, 94, 12.5, 

 17;!, 190, 238, 269, 302, 334, 365, 

 414. 

 - -, Jamaica, 8. 



Gliricidia maculata, shade for cacao, 135. 

 Glucose manufacture, cas.sava for, 148. 

 — , preparation from cassava flour, 162. 

 Goa, exports of mangos from, 412. 

 Goat keeping, 77, 421. 

 Goats, in Mexico, 421. 

 — Malta, 135. 

 Gold Coast, agriculture in, 281. 



— , cotton cultivation in, 309. 

 — , rubber cultivation in, 355. 

 Gommier resin, 255. 

 Gossypium barbadense, 229. 

 Grapes, gathering for market, 212. 

 growing, in Brazil, 345. 

 — , — Jamaica, 169. 

 — , — St. KittX 156. 

 Cirasses, anatomy of the leaves of British, 



374. 



Great Britain's orange supply, 425. 

 Green dressing, woolly pyrol, 153. 

 Grenada, agricultural society, 178. 

 arbor day celebration, 214, 252. 

 Asparagus iilumosus at, 172. 

 black Wight in, 234. 

 — , Botanic Station, jam 

 potato experiments at, 140. 

 , bullet wood tree at, 156. 

 , cacao brown rot in, 44. 

 , — exports of, 300, 305, 



and sweet 



360. 



34T 



manurial experiments, 124, 



soil, analvsis of, 46. 

 cultivation, 360, 369, 373, 



— , cotton 

 389. 



— — factory, 165. 



— — ginnery, 66, 348, 364. 

 — , export.s from, 57, 36(1. 



— lavas, 158. 

 — , local exhibition, 412. 



— mangos in New York, 265. 

 — , Monodora teuuifolia, 124. 

 — , onion cultivation in, 124. 

 — , orange trade with Barbados, 60. 

 — , report on Botanic Station, etc., 333. 

 — , — — insect pests, 218. 



— , school gardens in, 221, 235. 

 — , stock sale in, 124, 157. 

 — , thrips on cacao, 10, 90. 

 Ground dove in Jamaica, 188. 



— nuts as green manure, 424. 



— — , cultivation in East Africa 

 377. 



--—,--- Egypt, 300. 



— — , - - — Gambia, 323. 



— — , planting, 1 40. 

 Guadeloupe .laborandi, 94. 

 — , sugar industry in, 291. 

 Guaiac wood, oil of, 7. 



Guatemala, rubber industry, 316. 

 Ouava, as a weed, 229. 

 Guinea corn, diseases of, 201. 

 - gra.ss, machine for cutting, 21. 



H. 



Haematoxylon campecliianum, as a liedge 



plant, 233. 

 Halifax, banana trade at, 397. 



imports of molasses, 92. 

 Hall, A.D., The Soil, 11. 

 Hall, Maxwell, Meteorology of Jamaica, 



19. 



Hard-woods, trade in Jamaica, 414. 

 Harford, C.F., Hints on outfit for travel- 

 lers in tropical countries, 27. 

 Harries, H., Argan nuts, 279. 

 Harris, T. J., superintendent of public 



gardens, Bermuda, 188. 



, school gardens, 286. 

 Harrison, J. B., British Guiana board of 



agriculture, 29. 

 — , cotton cultivation in British Guiana, 



309, 389. 

 — , experiments in planting cocoa-nuts, 



378. 



, Grenada lavas, 158. 



, rum as an illuniinant and source of 



power, 226. 



, sugar-cane experiments in British 



Guiana, 66, 73, 82, 290, 307. 

 Hart, J.H., crustacean from Trinidad, 380. 



, date palm, fruiting of, 332. 



, report on Bai'bados and St. A'incent 



cotton factories, 186. 



— — Trinidad botanical depart- 

 ment, 253. 

 Hawaiian Islands, agriculture in, 329. 

 entomology in, 234. 

 i:)ine-ai>ples in, 340. 

 plant diseases in, 154. 

 report on experiment station. 



349. 



170. 



sugar-cane cultivation, 152. 

 — leaf hopper, 154, 



— , — seedlings in, 386. 

 — , — — , D.llTin, 1.30. 

 Hay, corn stalks as, 102. 

 Hayti, cotton cultivation in, 216. 

 — , exports of, 313. 



Head, I5randon, ' The food of the gods,' 75. 

 Hedge plants, 233. 

 Hemenway, H.D., How to make sshool 



gardens, 235. 

 Hemp trade in the Bahamas, 260. 

 Hering, C.J., Overizicht van de culturge- 



wasssen en Boschproducten in de 



kolonie Suriname, 299. 

 Hevea brasilien.sis, 355, 425. 

 Hibiscus Abelmoschus, 93. 

 — Sabdariffa, 167. 



