121 



Editorials (' 'imtinv 

 On understanding a crop md its 



requirements, 305. 

 ( )rigin oi W esl [ndian i conomic plants 



and animals, 97, 1 13. 

 Sciem ind the Press, l"l 

 Si nee and vernacular naming, 353. 

 S i ventilation, -i-'lT. 

 Storm-damaged crops, 273. 

 8 jar ai ies in differenl coun 



tries, 210. 

 Tl e American Society ol Agricultural 



I.'., ers, 193. 



The art of nature teaching, 241. 



The I hitch standard, 35, 



The educational functions ol Agricul 



tural Departments, I. 

 The importance of enclosures, 8 1. 

 The museum in practice, 385. 

 The organization of science, 289 

 The r61e of calcium carbonate, 161. 

 i sugar situation, 49. 

 The value of birds, 257 

 West Indian exhibits at the Imperial 



Institute, I 7. 

 Education in Demerara, notes on, 173. 



— Pernambuco, 1 1 2. 

 i i and heron rearing in Madag 



Egypt and the Soudan, date- of, 380. 

 Egyptian cotton, mutation in, 214. 

 Elaeis guineensis (Abais palm), 277. 



■ - (Oil palm), 316. 

 Electric power for agricultural opera 



tions. 111. 

 Electricity for the estate, 313 

 Engim rii _ agricultural, in the tropics, 



216. 

 Ensilage, conservation in warm climates, 



glioli, 67. 

 Enterolobium cyclocarpum, 309. 



— Timbouva, 309. 



Epizootic lymphangitis, quarantine 

 mi Barbuda, 252. 



— , treatment for, in British 

 I tsl Africa, 55 

 I grostis ib] -hi! i 108 

 Eriobotrya japonica, 244. 

 Errata, 339. 

 Essential oils as antiseptics, 1 B8 



rape, cultivation in Antigua, 11. 

 Eucalypts in Antigua. I I. 



Excreta, human, disposal of, 267. 



i roberti (flying fish ), 61. 



Explosives, employment of, in agricul- 

 ture, 52 



Exports, agricultural, from Colombia, 

 1912, 300 



— from Antigua, 1914, 185. 



— 1 lominica in 191 1, 1 68. 

 _ — Reunion in 1915, 300. 



— St. Lucia, -77. 



— — South Africa, 247. 



— of Sea Island cotton, 135. 

 Extraction of tannin from wattle bark, 



249. 



a du l ul | skin disea tttle), 



123. 

 I u in mechanics, 237. 

 Farming with dynamite, 147 

 Farmyard manure, substitute for, 412. 

 Faya I '/- < - i '<tt/a) 91. 

 Fedi ral corn grades, ISA, 2 13. 

 Feeding stuffs, tropical, utilization in 



I 'nitcd Kingd 277. 



Fermentation of cacao. 164. 



Fi i n, a sporting, 393. 



Fibres, textile, present supplj of, 73 



Fiji, agricultural progress in, 335 



— , progress of, 230. 



Filter-press cake, manurial value of , 242. 



Fine Cotton Spinners' dividend, 1914 15, 



200. 

 Fish, use of as cattle food, 4 I. 

 Fisheries, West Indian, development of, 



177. 

 Fixation of nitrogen in Indian soils, 347. 

 Flacourtia Ramontchi (Governor plum), 



117, 339. 



— sepiaria, 1 1 7. 



Flax (Z in a in vulgai e), 41. 



Flies, destruction ol b) mean- of disease, 



309 

 ' Flora of Jamaica', 236. 

 the Azores, 91 

 Florida velvet bean, 'J 17. 

 Flowers, cut. how to preserve, 60. 

 Fly larvae in horse manure, 22. 

 Flying fish i E ■< "'ti), 61. 



— parasite, 61. 

 Fonda. . I. I.. 8, 104 

 Food, unit values of, L'.'KI. 



Foodstuffs, tropical, and their valuation. 

 219. 



— , — , digestibility ol some, 261. 

 I oot and-moutb disease, 20 1 . 

 Forestry in Southern Nigeria, B8. 

 Formula for measurement of logs, 



220. 

 Fowl-, tubercular, a source of infection 



of pigs, I vS . 

 French West Indies, vanilla in, 84. 

 Frog, as a pest of Indian corn, 299. 

 Frost, Henry W. & Co., 22, 38, 54, 70, 



86, 102, 119, 134, 150, 166, 182, 



198, 214, 246, 278, 326, 342, 358, 



390, 106 



Fruit pulp, the making of, 340. 



tree-, -locks for, 23. 



Fruits, citrus, in the Philippines, 180. 

 — , tropical, cold storage for, 21 

 — , - , shield budding of, 36. 



Fuel consumption of gasolene engines, 



93. 

 Fumigation of baled cotton, 282. 



Egyptian cottoi seed, 150 

 Funtumia elastica, 91, 215. 

 Furcraea gigantea (Mauritius hemp), 77. 

 Fustic (Chlorophora tinctoria), use ol i 



a dye. 1 56. 



G. 



Gardens ol the Royal Horticultural 



So ii ty, 329. 

 ( las mantles, usi of ramie fibre in n 



factureof, 220. 

 1 • i i •■! swamp rice soils, 111. 

 Gasolene engines, fuel consumption of, 



93. 



ii potash, 105. 

 German South West Africa, resources of, 



27.".. | 



( Singer lily (Hedychium coronarwm),2l5, 



r on the London market. 31, 63, 



95, 1 13, 175, 207, 239, 271, 303, 335, 

 367, II... 



' llandars in mules, 380 



Gliricidia maculata as supports for van- 

 illa, 343, 381, 



Gloi iosa superba, 268. 



Gluten I I, 5 



Glycyrrhiza glabra, 359 



Goats' age according to their teeth, 259. 



-, as a source of milk, 380. 

 Golden apple, hevi (Spondias dubis, 



cytherea), 36. 

 Gold Coast, cacao exports from, in 1914 



and 1915, 112. 

 Gonioraa Kamassi (Knysma boxwobd)^ 



204 

 Gossypium arboreum, 215. 

 barbadense, 238 



— brasiliense, var, apospermum, 294. 

 obtnsifolium, 215. 

 peruvianum, 215. 



punctatum, 21 5. 

 Government aid in establishment of 



sugar factories, 185. 

 Governor plum (Flacmurtia. Ji-imontchi), 

 as a hedge-making plant, 117 33S. 



Crafted tropical fruit tree-, 300. 



> .rape fruit, handling of, \ 18. 



Grasses, St. Lucia, identification of, 277. 



Great Britain's supply of oranges and 



lemons, 164. 

 Grenada Agricultural and Commercial 



Society, meeting of, 27s. 

 Grenad.i, agricultural education in, 92. 

 — , — progress in, .''.si. 



— , ankylostomiasis in, 267. 



. export- during 1913 and 1914, 69. 

 — , item- of local interest, 68, 139, 159, 



is:, 22."., 245, 278, 310, 326. 



— land settlements, work on, 83 

 (Jrevillea robusta (Silver oak), 132. 

 Ground dove (Ghamaepelia patferina), 



258. 

 nut, Bambarra, in Northern Nigeria, 

 215. 



— , cultivation in St. l.ucia, 281. 

 '.ike in the diet of the horse, 

 I. ilea-. 67. 



— — . varieties resistant to Tikka 

 disease, 1 12. 



— nut-, cultivation experiments in 

 Rhodesia, 367. 



