419 



Cotton growing in Nevis, G. 



— — — South Africa, 7. 



■ — — — Southern California, 44. 



— — — the I >ominican Republic, 

 191. 



— — — — Virgin Islands, 6. 



— — season. West Indian, 22, 71. 

 - — in America, new facts concerning, 



lis. 



— industry, the world's, in 1912, 214. 



— in Egypt, 246, 262. 

 Nyasaland, 310. 



St. Vincent Grenadines, 182. 



— , pests of, 2G. 



— picker, a new, 118. 



■ — plants, rnovenient of stoniata in, 342. 



— problems in Louisiana, 326. 



— , Sakellarides rersvs Sea Island, 294. 

 — , Sea Island, competition in St. Vin- 

 cent, 406. 

 — , — — , in South Africa, 110. 



— season in Egypt, 86. 



— seed, importation into Egypt pro- 

 hibited, 108. 



— — meal, misbranding, 108. 



— worm, parasites of, 86. 

 — , yields in the Sudan, 134. 

 Cow-testing association, 293. 

 Creasote, importance of naphthalene in, 



9. 

 Crop.s, damage to by hurricanes, 88. 

 Crotalaria juncea in Southern India, 56. 

 Cryptostegia grandiflora, 185. 

 Cuba, experiments with cotton boll 



weevil in, 26. 

 Cupric treatments of soil, 358. 

 Curarao and its dependencies, agricul- 

 tural progress in, 393. 

 Cujcuta sp. (dodder), 189. 

 Cuts in rubber trees, watering of, 121. 

 Cuttings, problems in propagation by, 



183, 197. 

 Cyanamideas an insecticide, 271. 

 Cycads, 5. 



Cycloeephala tridentata, 186. 

 Cymbopogon coloratus and lemon grass 



oil, 375. 

 Cynodon Dactylon, 41. 

 Cyprus, cotton area in, 12. 

 Crotophaga ani (black witch or tick 



bird), 10. 

 Ceylon, experiments with Hevea in, 



10. 



151, 

 363, 



23, 45, 55, 69, 93, 

 1G2, 287, 323, 350, 



Departmental Reports, 19, 55, 85, 

 I 195, 229, 251, 267, 299, 31-5, 



371, 387, 405. 

 Department News 



107, 125, 149, 



365, 381. 

 Devir.s grass, 41. 



Disinfectants and disinfection, 24". 

 Distribution of plants, St. Lucia, 4. 

 Dodder {Cusruta sp.), 189. 

 Dolichos bitlora (kulphi), 217. 

 Dombeya chilensis, 5. 

 Dominica, 367. 



— , analyses of rubbers in, 39. 

 — , cacao experiments in, 39. 

 — , — prize-holdings competition, 244. 

 — , citrus exports from, 12. 

 — , lime cultivation in, 168. 

 — , notes on trees in blossom at, 228. 

 — , plant distribution in, 92, 140. 

 — Planters' Association, 397. 

 — , rainfall in, 76. 

 -, - of, 28. 



— , report on Agricultural Department, 



39. 

 — , successful budding of cacao in, 36. 

 — , trade of 1912, 120. 

 Dominican Republic, cotton-growing in, 



191. 

 Draft, effect of plough hitch on, 131. 

 Drainage, effect on rice soils, 137. 

 Drosophila ampelophila (vinegar fly), 150. 

 Dynamite, value in agriculture, 150. 

 Dyscinetus barbatus, 186. 



D. 



Dairying in Jamaica, 341. 

 Damags to sugar-cane by fire, 147 

 Dammara orientalis, 5. 



E. 



Edaphism, 104. 

 Editorials : — 



Advertising the West Indies, 305. 



Agriculture at the British Association, 

 1912, 1. 



Agricultural banks, 401. 



— bias in the teaching of subjects 

 other than science, 369. 



A tropical university, 49. 



A West Indian hand-book, 81. 



Contract between planter and special- 

 ist, 177. 



Control of the milk supply in .small 

 communities, 257. 



Demand for agricultural literature, 

 290. 



Division of labour, 17. 



Elasticity of demand, 193. 



Fermentation of cacao, a review, 321. 



Indian corn as a crop in the West 

 Indies, 209, 



Motor cultivation, 241. 



New uses for rubber, 273. 



Recent work on heredity, 129. 



Editorials {C'onrl tided): — 



Some aspects of rainfall, 161. 



The establishment of a tropical univer- 

 sity. 97. 



The imprrivemetit of ^\'e8t Indiaa 

 pastures, 113. 



The law of diminishing return, 385. 



The significance of a recent publicatioD, 

 225. 



The supply of corn to the AVest Indiesr, 

 337. 



Uuiforiuity ii, cotton production, 145. 



Variability of rainfall, 353. 



Water and life, 33, 65. 

 Education, agricultural, in St. Lucia, 159. 

 Education Gazette, Barbados, 41. 

 Efficiency of manual labour in different 



operations, 279. 

 Egretta candidissima (snowy Leron), 314. 

 Egypt, agricultural banks of, 211. 

 — , cotton in, 246, 262. 

 — , — season in. 86. 

 — , importation ot cotton seed pro- 

 hibited, 108. 

 — , Upper, prospect.- of fruit growing. 



in, 292. 

 Egyptian cotton, branching habits of, 86. 

 Elaei.s guineensis, 1^0, 229, 299. 

 Electricity and crop production, 373. 

 Pilettaria Cardamomnm, 3. 

 Elevator, portable, a self-propelled, 261, 

 Epilobium hirsutum, 366. 

 Epizootic lymphangitis, 172, 373. 

 Eriodendron anfractuosvm, 29, 326. 

 Eri silk, directions for cultivation of, 44. 

 Erythrina excelsa for shade and green 



manure, 380. 

 Estate work, a new pump for, 373. 

 Eucalyptus citriodora, 371. 



— cornuta, 229, 251, 371. 



— laurifolia, 283. 



— paniculata, 405. 



— rostrata, 229, 371. 



— rudis, 251, 371. 



— tereticornis, 371. 

 Euphorbia piluUfera, 236. 

 Europe, sugar consumption of, 28. 

 Exchanges, Indian, two new, 345. 

 Exhibitions, Bristol and Toronto, exhib- 

 its for, 244. 



Exotics, introduction of, 132. 



Explosives in agriculture, 136, 



Exports from West Indies to Canada, 



1912 13, 328. 

 Extraction of Castilloa elastica. 327. 



— — Landolphia rubber, S27. 



— — Manitoba rubber, 327. 



— — Manihot dichotom*. 527. 



Fagara nitida, 334. 

 Fagraea zeylcnica, 19. 

 Fawcett, William, 215. 



