426 



Sugar cane, cblorosis of, 6!<. 



, — in, prevention of, 211. 



, coefficient of inaiurily of, 25. 



— cultivation in Louisiana, notes 

 115 



Madras. 341 



— — — Uganda, 232. 

 — , itnraune variety for Torto llico, 



;o;i. 



— infested by nematode.s, 23(1 

 — , introduction irto the We.'^t Indies, 



242. 

 — , measuring the growth of, 233. 

 — , new varieties in Madras, 236. 



— sets, germination results. 318. 

 — , planting on the flat in St. Croix, 



203. 

 — , tolerance of fait by, 356. 



— varieties and froghopper blight, 343 



— — under cultivation in British Gui 

 ana in 1918, 315. 



— versus beet, 3 1 2 



Sugar-canes crushed at the Antijiua and 

 St. Kitts sugar factories, sucrcse con 

 tent of, 116. 



Sugar Industry (Continued) : — 



Louisiana syruj) making process in 



69. 

 Molascuit and mcgass meal, 59. 

 Standardization of molasses, 36. 

 Sugar by])roducts in Hawaii, 52. 



— fiictories in Antigua and St 

 Kitts, 36. 



— industry in Formosa, 69. 



— — — Guadeloupe, 84. 

 Syrup-making process in Louisiana, 



60. 

 Utilization of molasses, 375. 37. 

 Sugar outlook for 1920 30 375. 

 Su.uais, polarization test of, 409. 



Timber indusirv of Britisii Honduras 



172. 

 Toad (Biifo tiiarinus or B. agna), 361. 



37S. 

 Tobacco, controlled fermentation of 



279. 

 — , Imperial preference and, 279. 

 — , manurial experiments in Java, 316. 



— trade, Honduras, 44. 

 Tobago, development of, 44. 



— , hat making industry in, 172. 

 Tomatoes, hand-pollination of 397. 

 — , increasing the yields of, 381. 



— in the Hahamas, 147. 

 'I'onka bean (Dipkrix odorata), 110. 



— , sucrose content of, deterioration in 



169. I yields of, 359. 



Sugar, Cuban exports committee for, 89.'— potatoes, production 



— cultivation in Egypt 156, i States, 44. 

 in Germany, 211. { — sop {Anona squamosa), 



— factory, a West Indian, profit-shar-}Swietenia humilis, 297. 

 ingin, 19. i— macrophylla, 297. 



— factories, fuel oil for, 356. | — mahagoni, 297. 

 . West Indian, report on two, 39.|Swine fever, 264. 



Sugar-producing countries, South Amer-1' Top-minnows' {Gammtshi affinis), 8, 9, 



ican, 124. Tortola cotton factory, 333. 



Sulphate of ammonia and nitrate olJTouchardia latifolia (Olana), 287. 



.soda, combined use of, 73. (Tractor and plough, 'Twin City', 278. 



Sunn hemp {Crotalaria junced). 165,:_ demonstration in Barbados, 301 



340, 412. I— the work of, 349. 



— — in Grenada 413 Tractors, employment of, 247. 



%n\\di.xnx\\xy{Caryocar nuciftrum), 283—, motor, for St. Vincent, 301. 

 Sweet lime or myrtle lime (7/7//w«a|Tradf and sugar crop of Cuba, 43. 

 trifoliafa), 142. | — prosperity, Canadian, 21)3. 



potato in Montserrat, remarkablejTransport, a new form of, 387. 



iTravancore, coco-nut cultivation in, 342. 

 in UnitedTrees, citrus, pruning. 93. 



— , disea.sed, injection of antiseptics. 



into, 379. 

 — , rubber selection of, 379. 



— , precipitation of fog moisture by, 



134. 



Trichdsanthes 



— , glycerine from, 89. 



— ii iports into the United States, 124. 



— production in Louisiana, 204. 

 Peru, 44. 



— — — the British Ein[)ire, 189. 

 , the world's, map of, 247. 



— prospects, German, 102. 



— statistics, colonial, 226. 



• — technology, training in Hawaii in, 



261. 

 — , unrefined, imports from British 



West Indies into the United King- 

 ■ doiii in 1918 316: 

 — , virtues of, 243. 

 Sugar Industry ; — 



A big Cuban association, 306. 



Cane versus beet sugar, 3. 



Cost of production in, the, 248. 



Cuban sugar industry, jute sacks for 

 u«e in, 28. 



iSword hsAxi {Camvana eiisiformis), 55. i 137 



T. 



market, 15. 

 253, 303 



Tamarinds on the Laudon 



61. 95, 143, 191, 223, 



335, 367, 399 

 Tamboukie grass {And>-o/>ogon aiictus), 



39. 



— - - {Atidropogon Drcgramus), 39. 



— grasses (Cymbopogoii Nurdiis, var. 

 validiis), 39. 



Fangelos, 199. 



Tannias and eddoes, cause of acridity 



of, 57. 

 Tea, aroma of, 412. 



— cultivation in Ceylon, 44. 

 Teak {TecUma grandis), 291. 

 Temple of Agriculture, 239 



anguina (snake gourd), 

 igricultural credit societies 



Trinidad, 

 in, 249 



— A2ricultura] De[iartment and Board 

 of Agriculture, reorganization of, 47. 



exhibition, 104. 



re organization in 



— bamboo pajjor [)ulp 

 ii, 220. 



— , Board of Trade, 281. 

 — , cacao experiments in, 87 

 — , cassava experiments in, 109, 

 — , coco-nut industries of, 163. 



— credit societies, address to, 285. 



— exports 315. 

 , — of gasolene from, 268. 

 , forestry in 291. 

 1 mongoose in, food of. 38. 

 , rats troublesome in, 315. 

 , rice experiments in, 343. 

 , River estate , 360 

 , Southdown siieep iiitrnihieed into 

 284. 



393. 



manufacture 



126. 



, past and present, 148. ;Tejierifrr, Gacia plants from, 9. 



Granulated white beet sugar andjTephrosia Candida, 74, 100, 110, 119. 



white plantation cane sugar, 334 i 165. 

 Hawaiian sugar industry, develop jTerminalia Catappa (almond), 2<5. JTriphasia trifoliata (sweet lime or myr- 



nient ot. 103. 'Thatching grass or ' dek gras' {Andro\ tie lime), 142. 



Impressions of an American sugar! pogon Biichananii), 39. Tropics, zoological research station it> 



chemist in the West Indies. 354.)Thespesia popuhiea ('Jolm Bull 'tree), the, 



Impressions of a sugar chemist in( 4.5, 154. 



the French West Indies, 37. Thrinax argentea, 172. 



Industrial alchobol made from mo ITIiyrnol versus chenopodium for iiook- 



lasses, 86. , worm di.sease, 238. 



JaiiHairan HUgar industry, 2ft0. l-Ticks in Guadelou|)e, 155. 



Java sugar industry unsettled, 281. [Tif (0)o/Kn\Orodap/ine\foetens), 135. 



89. 



Turks and Caicos Islands, cotton Ordi- 

 nance in, 121. 



— — — — , industries of, 59. 



— — — — , salt industry of, 12. 



— Island, method of curing fish i4» 

 229. 



