425 



.Sugar iudustiy ami technical educa- 

 tion, 280. 



— palm, 244. 



— standards, Dutch, 407. 



— , sweet potatoes as a source ot, 3. 

 — . white, manufacture of, 19. 

 The importance of sampling canes in 

 regard to their sale to central 

 factories, .5.5. 

 The manufacture of ' habitant' rum in 



Guadeloujie, 147. 

 The Messchaert grooved mill roller, 



337. 

 The packing of sugar in bags, 55. 

 I'tilization of by-products, 306. 

 •Sulphuric acid for <lestruction of 



weeds, 411. 

 Sweet potatoes as a s(_)urce of sugar, 3. 

 — — , planting from tubers and vines, 84. 

 ■Swine breeding in the Philippines, 183. 

 Syrup treatment, 195. 



Tamarind, \vil<l, as soil renovator, 249. 



1. 



itlu 



trade 



101. 



Tamarinds on the Lomlon market, 



79, 111, 159, 223. 

 Tarifl' changes, new, an<i 



notices, 281. 

 Tea manufacture, 182. 

 Telegony, 344. 

 Tempany, H.A., 212. 

 Tephrosia Candida, 101. 

 ■ — hookeriana, var. anioena. 

 - — purpurea, 101, 292. 

 Terminalia citappi, 195. 

 'The Thinking Hand', 311. 

 The war and locally grown foodstutt's, 2G4. 

 Tick diseises, treatment and control 



of, 381. 

 — problem in New South Wales, 102. 

 Tobanus striatus (connnon horse fly of 



the Philippines), 23. 



Toronto exhibition, e.xhibits for, 265. 

 Trinidad, agricultural credit in, 227. 

 — I — — movement in, 40. 



— and agricultural banks, 57, 332. 



— — Tobago, agricultui-al industries in 

 1912-13, 89. 



— , cacao cultivation in, 180. 

 — , — fermentation in, 1 48. 



— Horticultural Club, 310 



— — Society, 185. 



Tropical agriculture, third international 

 congress of, 25. 



— development, 200. 



— products exhibition, 216. 



— — — West Indian awards at, 249. 

 Tropics, new fruit for, 164. 



— , density of population in, 104. 

 — , proper diet in, 149. 

 Trypanosomus Fecorum, 63. 



u. 



Ube {Dioscorta alata), 58. 



United States Department of Agricul- 



, ture, 375. 



, pig production in, 249. 



— — , spreading of prickly pear in, 58. 

 University, British, ff)r China, 184. 

 Unvaria rufa, 58. 



V. 



Vanilla, cultivation of, 402. 



— industry in the Seychelles, 354. 



— planifolifl, 402. 



— pompona, 402. 



Vegetation and radio-activity, 215. 

 Veterinary diploma, a new, 217. 

 Vigna catjang, 370. 



— unguiculata, 370. 



Virgin Islands, onion growing in, 360. 



— — , report on samples of watJ^r in, 123. 

 Volca ic action, effects of, 390. 



W 



Water hyacinth, 379. 



Wattle bark industry, present lX)sitioa 



of, 153. 

 Weather maji for the world, 120. 

 Weeds, sulphuric acid for destructioa 



of, 411. 

 West Africa, agriculture in, 41. 

 West African cotton, 102. 

 AVest Indian armadillos, 31. 



Bulletin, 121,326. 



cotton, 331. 



— — — on the Liverpool market, 6, 22, 

 38, 54, 70,86, 102, 118,139, 150, 

 166, 182, 198, 214, 230, 246, 262, 

 275, 294, 309, 331, 341, 356, 372, 

 388, 404. 



— — fibres and rubber, 105. 



— — pearl oyster industry, 265. 



— Indies, a new map of, 169. 



West Indies, agricultural affairs in, 88. 



— — , considerations affecting cotton 

 industry in, 404. 



— — , cultivation of sisal liemp in, 134. 



— — , introduction of Rhodes grass 

 into, 85. 



— — , lime cultivation in, 57. 



— — , — experiments in, 226. 



— — , new publication on the, 265. 

 Wheat production, increased i)i the Domin- 



ion.s, 355. 



Wheel for rural transport, 43. 



Wild bees (Poiistes spp.), 186. 



Wolstenholme and Holland, Messrs., 6, 22, 

 38, 54, 70, 86, 102, 118, 139, 150, 

 166, 182, 198, 214, 230, 246, 262, 

 275, 294, 309, 331, 388, 404. 



Wood, preservation of, 107. 



Z. 



Zantho.xylum fiavum, 105. 

 Zanzibar, clove industry in, 164. 



