429 



South Australia, beet-growing in, 60. 

 South, F. W., 59, 147, 174, 195, '21K. 

 Southern Nigeria, Funtumia rubber in, 

 235. 



— — , rubber experiments in, 29.'J. 

 Soutliern Siam, cotton cultivation in, G. 

 Soy bean exports, Manchuria, 2lS. 



— — in Cej'lon, 28. 



— — — England, trials of, 137, l!Mi 



— beans, milk from, 403. 

 Spadonas, 332. 

 Sparrows and mites, 220. 

 Spilochalcis femoratus, 266. 

 Spots on Para rubber, 62. 

 Spraying to kill weeds, 41. 

 Starch and soil fertility, 12. 



— manufacture in the U. S., 60. 



— production in St. Vincent, 183. 

 Starches, adsorption Viy, 281. 

 Sterilization and fertility, 151. 

 Stizolobium niveuni, 4. 



Stock, cotton .'^eed meal as food for, 

 359 



— poisoning and Asclepias cnrassavica, 

 268. 



— , tuberculosis among, 313. 



Straits Settlements, agriculture in, 1910, 



157. 

 Sucrose and soil fertility , 12. 

 Sudan, cotton-growing in, 214. 

 Sugar beet area in liussia. 252. 



— — England, 1 03. 



— content of oranges, 36. 



— crop of Argentina, 76. 



— — — Eastern Bengal and Assam, 

 108. 



— — — Louisiana, 108. 



— — — Philippines, 124. 



— — — Queensland, 108. 



— — — St Kitts, 76. 



— exports from Barbados, 77. 



— — — Mexico, 2S4. 



— Philippines, 204. 



Trinidad, 151. 



— factories, electric motors in, 204. 

 in the Philippines, 268. 



— , foreign imports into U.S., 251. 



— from shredded cane, 3, 59, 147. 



— imports into U.S., 3. 



— — per head. United Kingdom, 332. 



— in Argentina, 365. 

 — ■ — Formosa, 371. 



— — .Jamaica, 327. 



— — Madeira, 396. 



Natal, 236. 



Philippines, 19. 



U. S., 17'.'. 



Sugar Industry : — 



Antigua Sugar Factory, 163. 

 Bordeaux mixture in cane-planting, 



195. 

 cost of growing sugar-cane in Cuba, 



275. 

 Demerara sugar-canes in Louisiana, 



67. 

 distance of cane-planting, 370. 



Sugar industry {Continued): — 

 Java sugar crop^ 51. 

 New York Su£,'ar Trade Laboratory, 



131. 

 opening of the .St. Kitts sugar factory, 



99. 

 production of white sugar directly 



from sugar cane, 387. 

 relation between the crushing of cane 



and the volume of fibre, 291. 

 some West Indian sugar-canes in 



India, 306. 

 .sugar beet in England, 1 63. 



— from shredded cane, 19, 147. 



— in Formosa, 371. 



the Philippines, 1910, 19. 



United States, 1911, 179. 



— industry in India, 243. 



— manufacture in .Java, 1910, 227. 



— trade of the United Kingdom, 

 1911, 115. 



wax from the sugar-cane, 195. 



West Indian sugar canes in Queens- 

 land, 371. 

 Sugar industry exports, British Guiana, 



348. 



in India, 243. 



— , Java, imports into Canada, 300. 



— manufacture in Java, 1910, 227. 



— production in Hawaii, 348. 



Mauritius, 332. 



St. Kitts. -268. 



of Brazil. 188. 



— tradp, United Kingdom, 115. 

 — , uses for, 323 



— , white, direct from sugar-cane, 387. 



— , — , imports into India, 243 



— , yields in Peunion, 205. 



Sugars, destruction by ultra-violet rays, 



220. 

 Sugar-cone and ilendeli.sm, 33. 



— beetle in Mauritius, 90. 



— crushing and vclume of fibre, 291. 



— diseases in Porto Pvico, 382. 



— growing, co>t in C'ulia, 275. 



— insects of Hawaii, 74. 



— pest in St. Croix, 346. 



— planting, distance of, 370. 



— seedlings, Deiuirara, in Louisiana, 

 124. 



-- shredded, sugar from, 3, 19. 



— , wax from, 124, 195 



— , white sugar directly from, 387. 



Sugar-canes, Demerara. in Louisiana, 67. 



Sulphate of ammonia production, 21. 



Sulphur as a manure, 251. 



— content of plants, 345. 



— in soils, 39. 



Sulphuric acid and germination, 264. 

 Sumatra, rublier-growing in. 233. 

 Sunlight and plant growth, 134. 

 Sunn hemp, 333. 



Sweet potato stem, movement of water 

 in, 12. 



— potatoes, growing from roots, 140. 

 Sword bean, see Cabavalia gladiata. 



T. 



Taggart, W. S, 118. 



Tagua, 325. 



Tamarinds on the London market, 15, 



63, 79, 111, 1.59, 175, 223, 255, 287, 



319, 351, 383. 

 Tapia, see Uapaca clusiaceae. 

 Tar, effect on trees, 220. 

 Tea, manurial experiments with, 153. 



— imports into the U.S , 143. 

 Tempany, H. A., 99, 104, 354, 375, 308, 



314. 



Temperature of soil under different con- 

 ditions, 135. 



Tephrosia purpurea in Ceylon, 28. 



Termites, nnw method of controlling, 122. 



Texas fever. Zebu cattle resistant to, 27. 



Theories concerning soil fertility, 209. 



Thespesia populnea, 341. 



Thornton. T., 69. 



Ticks, 394, 410. 



Tiphia parallela, 234, 298. 



Tobacco, curing of, 102. 



— , experiments in Ceylon, 63. 



— in Nyasaland, 367. 



— manuring, 204. 



— , preparation by electricity, 307. 

 — • seed, oil from, -i'l, 284. 

 Tobago, coco nut diseases in, 398. 

 Togoland, cotton in. 316, 236. 

 Tonka bean, 149. 



— beans, export from Venezuela, 268. 

 Trade and agriculture of Barbadcs, 



1910-11, 77. 

 British Honduras, 1910, 



121. 



Cuba 1910-11, 315. 



Gold Coa.st, 8. 



— Grenada, 1910, 123. 



— of Panama, 1911, 325. 



Sierra Leone, 1910, 43. 



Uganda, 1910 11, 139. 



Transvaal, maize crop of, 204. 



Trap for the Egyptian cotton worm, 7. 



Tree.s, cement for cavities in, 259. 



— , planting of, 103. 



— , preservation of, 251. 



Tricbilia emetica, 300. 



Trichogramma pretio.sa, 186. 



Trifolium pilulare, 140. 



Trinidad, agriculture in, 1910-11, 151. 



— , banana exports from, 69. 



— , cacao exports from, 44, 69, 72, 108, 

 151, 2.^2 



— , — Prize Competition in, 53 

 — , coco nut exports from, 151. 

 — , entomological work in, 169, 314. 

 — , forest-planting in, 204 

 — , fruit exports from, 151. 

 — , registration of nurseries, 204. 

 -, report of Agricultural Department, 



G9. 

 — , rubber exports from, 151. 

 — , sugar exports from, 151. 

 Tropaeolutn, sugar synthesis in, 180. 



