420 



Ootton cultivation in Tortola, 173. 



_ _ ._ West Africa, 342, 358. 



— , — of distinct species in Northern 



Nigeria. 21 5. 

 — , declaration of as contraband, 



on British cotton-growing industries, 



■ 

 . — , Egyptian, mutation in, 214. 



iperiments in Barbados, 1913-14, 

 263. 



_ _ St. Croix, 134. 



— - St. Kitts Nevis. .19. 



— expert, visit of, to West Indies, 8 38. 

 • — expert's tour in West Indies, 104. 



— export- from the West Indies, 230, 

 326. 



— growers and spinners, co-operation 

 between, 358. 



■ — growing competition in St. Vincent, 



22. 

 ■ — — experiments in Natal, 394. 



— , imports into United Kingdom, 246, 



412. 

 • — in Barbados, 150. 



— - Montserrat, 231. 



— industry in Jamaica. 294. 



— — — South Africa, 247. 

 --- Sudan, 294. 



— — Uganda. 294. 



— — — West Africa, 294. 



— Ordinance, Montserrat, 102. 



— . Sea Island, a use of, 150. 

 — , — - — , exports of, 135. 



— , — — , guaranteed minimum 



prices for, 1 19. 

 Cotton seed, Egyptian, fumigation of, 



150. 

 ■ — - meal and beef scrap as food 



for chickens, 6. 



— — as a feed, 6. 

 -- — oil in butler, 166. 



— . si th, results of planting, 



- 319. 



— stainer trap, 309. 



- — stalks for paper-making, 198. 

 — , testing types in Montserrat. 397. 



— Traffic Ordinance. St. Kitts-Nevis, 

 amendment of, 70. 



— , I'pland long staple, spinning tests, 



86. 

 — , West Indian Sea Island, fixed prices 



tor, 342. 

 Couratari exigua, 309. 



Courses "I reading, revised, 93. 



< ''.well, .John Francis, 3S9. 

 Cowpea ( VfiK-i catjang var.) attacked by 

 ( iryptorhynchus borer. 346. 



vines as I I for stock, 181. 



Cowpeas, colour of, 133. 



Crops, areas controlled by United Fruit 

 Company. 84. 



— in Dominica, damage bj ^storm, 361. 

 of St. Lucia, effect of excessive rain 



fall on, 403. 

 Crotalaria juncea (Kast Indian hemp), 

 77, 



Crotalaria juucea (Sunn hemp). 92. 

 Crotophaga Ani (Tick bird), 258. 

 Crown Colonies and Protectorates, 



Indian population in, 378. 

 Colony Reports, notes from. 330. 

 Cryptocarya vaccinifolia, 316. 



Cuba, alcohol as fuel in. 237. 



— , land development in, 135. 



— , timber resources of. 157. 



Cuban sugar factory results, 274. 



industry, the molasses prob- 

 lem, 116. 



Cultivation of onions, 1 71. 



Cultivations under control of United 

 Fruit t lompany, 84. 



Cuscuta sp. (Love vine or dodder). 355. 



Custard apple (Amma reticulata), 36. 



Cust sla\\s, Canadian, 25. 



Cut flowers, how to preserve, 60. 



Cyclonic disturbance of August 10, 1915, 

 in West Indies, 349. 



Cynodon dactylon (devil's grass), 47, 

 267. 



Cyperus rotundus (Japanese nut grass), 

 190, 267, 354. 



Cypre (Cordia gerascathus), 182. 



Dates of Egypt and the Sudan, 380. 



Deer, Noel, 116. 



I lemerara, agricultural industries in, 328. 



— , anthrax in, 108. 



— , notes on education in, 173. 



— , planting of sugar-canes in, 131. 



Dendropemon caribaeus, 236. 



Department News, 38, 54, 86, 102, 130, 



155, 195, 221, 237, 267, 279, 301, 



391, 405. 



- of Agriculture, Trinidad and Tobago, 

 Report on, 2D!. 



I lepar' mental Reports : - 



British Guiana: Report of Depart 

 ment of Science and Agriculture, 

 1913 14, 21 I 

 St. Vincent : Report on Agricultural 

 Department, 1913-14, 71. 

 I lesmodium incanum, 363. 



- sp (beggar weed), 1 1. 



Destruction of flies by mean- of disease, 

 309. 



Devil's grass (Cynod on dactylon), 17, 267. 



Didelphys virginiana (opossum), 203. 



Digestibility of some tropical foodstuffs, 

 261. 



Diospyros Ebenasta (Bois Bambarra), 

 317. 



I lipterocarp forests, 233. 



Dipteic .carpus tuberculatus, 233. 



Dip'terix odorata (Tonka bean) in Trini- 

 dad, 153, 277. 



Divi divi, a source of valuable dye, 71. 



I lolichos bulbosus, 165. 



— lablab (Lablab bean), 105, 121, 363 



Dominica Botanic Gardens, loss of trees 



by storm, 309. 



— — , Official Guide to, 

 153, 297, 316. 



, cacao manurial experiments in, 317. 

 , damage sustained by gale, 285. 

 — , — to crops by storm, 361. 



— , exports in 19 1 I, I US 



— , — of lime products from, 394, 

 — , items of local interest, l">, lis, 107, 



139, 183, 223, 245, 271), 311, 326, 



351, 366. 



— lime cultivation, new plot experi- 

 ments in, 372. 



— , — industry in. 317. 

 — , plant distribution in, 317. 

 — , — importation into, 317. 

 — , rainfall in 1914, 72. 



— rubber, reports on, 38, 1"- 



— , training of agricultural pupils in, 



121. 

 — , transport of produce in, 25 



— vital statistics, 1914, 236. 

 Donkey, as a transport animal for St. 



Lucia, 281. 

 ' Doob' or devils grass, 47. 

 Double coco-nut palms in the Wsel 

 t Indies, 312. 

 Drug plants, tropical, 359. 

 Drugs and spices on the London market, 



31, 63, 95, 143, 175, 207, 239, 271, 



303, 335. 

 Ducks as a preventive of malaria and 



yellow fever, 393. 



mosquito destroyers, 112. 

 Duckweed (Synedrella nodiflora), 267. 

 Dunlop, W. li , 403. 

 Dutch colour standard, 121. 

 Dyeing industry and the tropics, 200. 

 I rye, a new vegetable, 262. 

 Dyes, increased demand for, 204. 

 Dynamite, use i n agriculture, 1 17. 



E. 



East Indian hemp (Crotalaria juncea), 



77. 

 Economic plants and animals, \\ . 31 



Indian, origin of, 97. 

 Editorials : — 



Alcohol as fuel in the tropics, 209. 



Ankylostomiasis, 225. 



Citrus canker, 65. 



Development of West Indian fisheries 

 177. 



Economic changes, 33. 



Forest soils and nitrogen, 3l>9. 



Fortunately situated, 321. 



Increasing the plant- efficiency, 1 J."i, 



Individuality in cacao trees, 129. 

 Introduction of disease, 65. 

 Molasses as a manure, 210. 



