419 



Editorials : — 



Agricultural Departments and new 



developments, 399. 

 Agricultural development, SiJl. 

 Camidian Exhibitions, 191+, 24 1. 

 Care of jjublications, 22o. 

 Coiumercial standardization, L'5(>. 

 Improvement of soils, 3(57, 3S.S. 

 Legislative protection of plants aiid 



animals, 273, 289. 

 Marlcet prices for West Indian produce 



during 1913, 1. 

 Meat production in tiie West Indies, 



177. 

 I'roduction of alcohol foi' motor fuel, 



SI. 

 Seasonal climatic changes, 1 1 3. 

 Seed cijutrol stations, 303. 

 The budding of cacao, 145. 

 The circulation and storage of facts, 



209. 

 The control of bovine tuberculosis in 



the West Indies, 97. 

 The European planter in the tropics, 



49. 

 The history of agriculture, 319. 

 The Imperial Department and agricul- 

 tural education, 129. 

 The international spirit in tropical 



agriculture, 1 7. 

 The manuring of Sea Island cotton, 



ICl. 

 The philosophy of sampling, 33. 

 Vegetation and the conservation of 



rainfall, 193. 

 Wanted : A tropical agricultural note- 

 book, 6"). 

 West In<lian food production. 33."). 

 IMucation, agricultural, in South Africa, 



report on, 197. 

 - — , technical, and the sugar industry, 



280. 

 J'-ggs, method of hatching in China, 285. 

 Eichornia sp., 379. 

 Elaeis guineensi.s, 67, 120. 

 Electro-potash, a new maiuue, 2S9. 

 Elephant grass (P/^rmisetum purjnirevm), 



135. 

 Epizootic lynii)hangitis, 413. 

 Eragrostis Abyssinica, 85. 

 Eriobotrya japonica, 141. 

 Essential oils, commercial notes on, 215. 

 Estates in the East, labour on, 150. 

 Exophthalmus esuriens, 303, 358. 

 E.\periments, manurial, in the flennan 



colonies, 201. 

 Explosives and the blowlamp in the 



garden, 375. 

 - , lectures on, 235. 

 Exports from Dominica, 1913, 1*58. 



Farm arithmetic, 53. 



Eibre decorticator, new, 299. 



Fibre-cleaning machine, a new, 173. 

 Ficus nitida, 158. 

 Fiji, sisal hemp in, 86. 

 Fistula in horses, treatment of, 413. 

 Forage poisoning, 219. 

 Forests and floods, 296. 

 Fowls, domestic, origin of, 409. 

 French rubber trade, 91. 

 Frost, Henry W. &. Co., 6, 22, 38, 54, 

 70, 86, 102, 118, 139, 150, 166, 182, 

 198, 214, 230, 246, 275, 309, 356, 

 372, 388, 404. 

 Fruit and vegetables, cold storage of, 



100, 116. 

 Fungus Notes : 



Actinonema rosae, on roses, I'ify. 

 Aschersonia turbinata, on Coccus 



mangiferae, 94. 

 Aspergillus parasiticus, on mealy-bugs, 



46. 

 Atichia dorainicana, 238. 

 Bacterium tumefaciens, 30. 

 Base rot of pine-apples, 190. 

 Black root disease of limes, 364. 

 Black rot of sweet potatoes {Sph'tero- 

 nema timbriatum [Ceratoct/stis fim- 

 hriala]), 110. 

 Black s|)ot of rose leaves, 14. 

 Bordeaux mixture, how to make adhe- 

 sive, 46. 

 Botrytis vulgaris, 30. 

 Bracket fungi (Poli/stictus saii'/uineus, 



Schizophyllui'i commune), 14. 

 Capnodium sp., 93. 

 Cephalosporium .sacchari, 62. 

 Uerco.spora sacchari (leaf spot of sugar 



cane), 62. 

 Charcoal rot of sweet potato, 110. 

 Chondras crispus and Gigartina mam- 



illosa, used in .spraying, 190. 

 Cladosporium fulvum (tomato leaf 



mould disease), 174. 

 Cob rot of corn, 396. 

 Coco-nut bud rot in India, 286. 

 Colletotrichum falcatum (red rot of 

 sugar-cane), 30, 62, 158, 412. 



— luxificum, 30. 



Conditions favourable to the develop 

 ment of mildew, 238. 



Coniosporium gecevi, 39(i. 



Conothecium sp., on limes, 15s. 



Control of dam ping-off disease, 158. 



Cordyceps barberi, 234. 



Corticium lilacino-fuscum (pink dis- 

 ease), 95. 



— salmonicolor, on Desmodium, 

 101. 



— — (pink disease), 30. 

 Damping-off, 380. 



Decay of pine-apples, 222. 



Delphax saccharivora and sooty mould, 



93. 

 Diaporthe jjhomopsis, I'homa batatis 



(dry rot of sweet potato), 110. 

 Dicoecum [Marssonia] rosae, 158. 

 Die-back disease, 187. 



— of Hevea and cacao (Thyridaria. 

 tarda), 14. 



Dry rot of sweet potato (Diaporthe 

 batatis), 110. 



— — — tannias, 46. 

 Entomogenous fungi, 46. 



Eutypa erumpens, on evergreen trees, 



Exoasi;us Theobromae, 30. 



Fonies .scmitostus in British (Juiana^ 



14. 

 Foot rot of sweet potato {Pltnodoimis- 



destriieiii), HO. 

 Fungoid diseases in Barbados, 1912-13, 



158. 

 Funtumia elastica, 89. 

 Fusarium wilt, 412. 

 Grass, effecis of on fruit trees, 302. 

 Green muscardiue fungus, 26. 



— — — in Samoa, 78. 



— — — (Metariliizium 

 anisopliae), 171. 



— — — on weevil borer 

 and hard back grubs, 46. 



Helminthosporium sacchari (leaf spot 

 of sugar-cane), 62. 



Hot water treatment for cotton an- 

 thracnose, 396. 



Hymenochaete noxia (root disease of 

 Hevea and ca.ao), 1 4. 



Java black rot of sweet potato, 110. 



Leaf-cut or tomosis, a disorder of 

 cotton seedlings, 125. 



Leaf mould disease of tomato {Clad- 

 osporium ful mm), 174. 



— spot (Cercospora sacchari), 62. 



— — (Helminthosporium sacchari),. 

 62. 



Lepidosaphes beckii, 238. 

 Lime leaves, new fungus on, 238. 

 Marasmius sacchari (root disease of" 

 sugiir-CiUe), 14, 30, 158, 171. 



— sp., on sweet potato, 110. 

 Melanconium sacchari, 30, 62. 

 Metarrhizium anisopliae (gi-een mus- 

 cardiue fungus), 171, 408. 



— — on the rhinocero-s 

 beetle, 78. 



Necator decretus, 30. 

 Necosmospora vasinfecta, 348, 412. 

 Nectria iponifBae, 110. 

 Omphalia flavida, 141. 

 Ozonium omnivoruni, 111. 

 Panama disease of banana, 46. 

 Phoma bataae, 110. 

 Phomopsis citri, 30. 

 Phj'llosticta bataticola. 111. 

 Phytophthora Faberi (pod disease and 

 canker of cacao), 1 4, 69. 



— omnivora, 286. 



— parasitica, 46. 



Pink disease (Corticium lilacino-fus- 

 cum), 95. (Corticium sabnonicolor), 

 30, 101. 



Plenodomus destruens (foot rot of 

 sweet potato), 110. 



