423 



K. 



Kamerun, caca'^ in, i. 

 Kola nil the Luinlon market, 15, 47, 79, 

 111, L'07, 22.1 :m. 



L. 



Labour-f-aviiig ilevices, recent piiigress in, 



173. 

 Lago.s cotton croj), I !) 1 4, •i.'^. 

 Lalang grass (Imperaia arundinacea), 



16.5. 

 Land settlement in South Africa, 373. 



— settlements, St. Vincent, report for 

 1912-1.3, S. 



Leaf movement and stomata, 347. 

 Leeward Islands, agriculture in 1912. 152. 

 - — — , sdils, bacterial action and 



organic matter in, 213. 

 Leucaena glauca, lf)l. 

 Licorice, 333. 

 Lime cultivation in the West lndie>. 57. 



— e.xperiments in the West Indie.s, 226. 

 —juice, coucentratii)n of, 231. 



— — factory, (Tovernment, St. Lucia, 

 245. 



- — — on the L<indon market. 15, 47, 



79, 111, 207, 22.3, 397. 

 • — oil on the I..ond(in market, 15, 47, 



79. 111. 207, 22.3, 397. 

 — , sources of, 22S. 

 — , special effects nf, 227. 



— trees, growth oi, 231. 

 Limestone, ground, 291. 

 Lipase, 260. 

 Leucaena glauca, 165. 



M. 



Macodaniia ternifnlia, 148. 



Mace on the London market, 15, 47, 79, 



111, 207, 22.3, .397. 



Maize, phospho-constitueiit of, 43. 



— seedlings, drought-resisting adapta- 

 tion in, 93. 



Mai de Caderas, further note on, 72. 



_ — — , position of Northern Islands 

 in regard to, 75. 



Manganese as a fertilizer, 361. 



Mangoes, need for classification of, 228. 



Manure waste, utilization for tropical 

 croj)s, 393. 



Manures and manuring, .Japanese prac- 

 tices, 91. 



— for cotton, the way to ajtply, 72. 

 Manuring of coconuts, 20. 



Map of the West Indies, a new, 169. 

 Margaropus annulatus (carrier of Texas 



fever), 183. 

 Market reports, 16, 32, 48, 64, 80, 96, 



112, 128, 144, 160, 176, 192, 208, 

 224 240, 2.56, 272, 288, 304, 318, 

 334! 3.50, .376,382 .398,414. 



M.arniosa chapmnid, 31. 



Mauritius, agricultural activities in, 1 39. 



— , — e<lucation in, 1 ()o. 



— and agricultural banks, 163. 



— Department of Agriculture, 407. 

 , Mealies, manuring of, ] 49^ 



I Meit scarcity, 21 7. 



i — — , effect on cjco-imt and palm 



I oil trade, 217. 



I — — in temperate countries, 201. 



Medicago denticulata, 91. 



Meteorological reseirch, 89. 

 j Micro-organisms, mutation in, 185. 

 I Microccus nialitensis, 11. 

 ] Milk adulteration in British Guiana, 124. 

 ! — su])ply, pure, 390. 



Mimusops djawa. 331. 



— globosa, 89. 



Minerals, local, utilization of, 297. 

 Mocha coffee culture, 323. 

 Molasses, American, in Europe, 229. 



— as a source of alcohol, 306. 



— ' blackstrai)" (feeding), 179. 

 — , soliditieil, 277, 337. 

 Molassed superphospliate, 149. 

 Montserrat, agricultural prospects in, 324, 



340. 

 — , agricultural -h.pw. 1914, 104. 

 Morinila citrifolia, 342. 

 Motor ])lough cvimpetitiou, 22. 



— jiloughs, new kinds, 296. 

 Mutual ciedit i 1 India, 69. 

 Myrciaria caulifloja, 355. 



N. 



Nephelium litchi, 355. 

 Nevis, experiment^ with coconuts in, 354. 

 New Delhi H'jiticultural Department, 20. 

 New South Walrs. the tick problem in, 



102. 

 New York, aroi'Is in, 3. 

 Nitrate production, endeavours to cheapen, 



43. 

 Nitrification and disease, 187, 199. 

 — , effect of carbon bisulphide and 



toluene on, 133. 

 Nuts, three new edible, 148. 

 Nutmegs on the London market, 15, 47, 



79, 111, 207, 223, 397. 



Oenothera Lamarcxiana, 357. 



Oil, new sources of, 331. 



— products of local interest, 391. 



Oil nut devrlopment in British Honduras, 



1.59. 

 Oils, essential, c^immercial notes on, 215. 

 — , — , used in perfumery, 35. 



— , liquid, turning into solid fats, 72. 

 Onion Gr^iwers' Association, Antigua, 



meeting if, 9, 341. 



Onion growers, hints to, 84. 



— growing in the Virgin Island.s, 360. 



— trade, 206. 

 Orange grafting, 386. 



— oil industry, 180. 



(Jranges, preparation for market, 322. 



— , sweet or sour, 386. 



— , waste, utilization of, 305. 



O.xalis corniculata. 402. 



Oxen, fattening capacity in, 251. 



Palm kernels, 373. 



— oil in the German colonies, 283. 



— — seed {Elaeis i/uineensis), germiaa- 

 tion uf, 67. 



Palmarum dactylifera, 117. 

 I Panicum elephantipes, 120. 

 Papay.n, cultivation of, 276. 

 Paper i)ul]j from grasses, 117. 

 Paspalum dilatatum. 85, 140. 

 Pearl oyster industry. West Indian, 26.3. 

 Peas and beans, 370. 

 Peat, bacterial treatment of, 198. 

 — , bacterized, experiment with, 263. 

 Pennisetum purpureum (elephant grass), 



8.5, 13.5. 

 Perfumery, essential oils used in, 35. 

 Personal notes, 406. 

 Phaseolus lunatus, 340, 370. 

 Philippine Expo.>ition, 1914, 237. 

 Philippines, cacao in, 143. 

 Philodendron giganteum, 3, 246. 

 Phosphate fertilizers, locking up of, 309. 

 Phospho-cimstituent of maize, 43. 

 Phragmites karka, 117. 

 Pigeon pea, selection of, 58. 

 Pig industry, organization of, 206. 



— production in the United States, 249. 

 Pigs, banana meal for, 63. 



— , fattening f)n cassava, 329. 



— , feeding cassava to, 285. 



Pimento on the London market, 15, 47, 



79, 111, 207. 22.3, 297. 

 Pine-apple trade, canned, 196. 



— vinegar, 305. 

 Piroplasma bigeminum, 102. 



Plant diseases, [jrecautionary measures 

 against spread of, 379. 



— food, absorption of, 93. 



— growth anil partial sterilizaci^in, 191. 



— products as manures, 185. 



— sensibility and its revelation, 279. 

 Plantation Para rubber, variability if 



59. 

 Plantations in the tropics, selecti'Oi of 



lands for, 105. 

 Plants, breeding medicinal, 3. 



— uniler domestication, 89. 

 Polarimetrv, growth in the application of 



228. 

 Porlo Rico, experiments with sugar-cane 



in 1913, 19. 

 Potash, supply of, 291. 



