564 



INDEX. 



Lower forest and field plants 212 



zone, 210 



zone, Plants of, 202, 210 

 Lowland zone, 195, 201 



Plant life of the. ]8fl 

 Low-tide Fishing for squid at, 472 



Hawaiian reef at, 472 

 Luakini. A heiau of the largest class. 

 Lneerne, 286 

 Lueina shell, 456 

 Lueuma (see Egg fruit) 

 Lyeopersieum (sec Tomato) 

 Lyeopodiacae (sec Club-mosses) 

 Lyric talent of Hawaiians, 42 



M 



Maalaea Bay, 13S 



Mabu (sec Lama) 



Mafkerel, 361 



shark, 340, 346 



Macadamia (sec Queensland nut) 



MaeCaughey, Prof. Vaughan (Botanist). 

 12, 1.52 

 Photograjihs liy, 14 



Machinery, Pb-intation, 274 



Madagascar cowry [Lelio puupuu],470, 45!) 

 periwinkle, 250 



Madreporite exidained, 4ST 



Maggot (405). The larva of a fly, but often ap- 

 plied to other worm-like ere.itures. 



Maggots, 405, 419 



Mahihi, 344, 354 



Mahimahi (Common (k>l]iliin), 362 



Mahiole. A war cap: a helmit (.see plate 6. 



flg. 2). 

 Mahiole, 44 

 Mahogany, American, 211 



Hawaiian, 211 

 Mahukona violet, 19!) 

 Makika, 388 

 Maia (Banana), 193, 257 



(Chinese banana), 258 

 Maiapilo, 192, 199 

 Maiden-hair fern, 223. 419 

 Maieli, 230 

 Mali 'i, 349 



Maika, game of (■•<(( l"lu and maika) 

 Maile, 214, 216, 221 



lei, 78, 216 



lei, How made, 216 



Use of, 71 

 Mairi:^Maile 

 Major agricultural industries (raising 



sugar-cane), 274 

 Makaloa mat, 57 



mats, how ornamented, 73 

 Makapuu Point, 109, 131 

 ilakaweli caiion, 107 

 Ma ka well valley, 107 

 Makiawa (Hawaiian herring), 350, 349, 



358 

 Makiki valley, 117 

 Making fire, 40 



of lauhala mats, 72 



of salt, 73 



stone adzes, 75 



tapa, 76 

 Makua, 35S 



station. Barking samls at, 122 

 Malabar, 221, 249 

 Malay archipelago, 210, 249 



peninsula, 304 

 Male children. How regarded. 46 

 Malo. A strip of tapa cloth girded about the 



loins of men : in former times the malo was 



the only dress worn bv men when at work 



(«»•<■ plate 5, fig. 1), 

 Malo, David (Native Hawaiian Antiquar- 

 ian), 329 

 Malo , Feather, 57 



Tapa, 44 



The, 38 



of LTmi, 44 

 Malolo (Flying fish), 366, 349. 355 

 Malpighia (see Barbados cherry ) 

 Mamake^Mamaki 

 Mamake, 212, 217 



Insects on, 411 

 Mamamo, 349 

 Mamani, 226 



Use of wood of, 226 

 M a m a n u=M a m a n 

 Mamero (see Papaya) 

 Mammalia (29.5). The highest group of animals 



containing those forms that suckle their 



.voung. 



Mammea (see Mammee apple) 



Mammee apple (Mammea Americana Linn.) or St. 

 Domingo apricot is well known in Hawaii, 

 having doubtless been introduced from the 

 West Indies where it is a native. The fruits 

 are 3 to 6 inches in diameter, round, russet- 

 colored or brown, with a yellow juicy pulp 

 which may be eaten raw without flavoring — 

 as the taste does not have to be acquired. 

 Its nearest ally in Hawaii is the Garcinia. 

 The tree. 20 to 40 feet high, has rigid leath- 

 ery leaves. 



Mamo, 332 



Black, 332, 333, 335 

 feathers, use of, 75 

 Oahu, 33.^ 



Mana flats, 103 

 Sands at, 108 



Mandarin orange (Citrus iiobilis Lour.) is some- 

 times called the kid-glove orange, owing to 

 the ease with which the ruddy, orange-yellow, 

 loose, baggy rind may be removed. The 

 fruits, small, slightly flattened and rough, are 

 seldom more than two inches in diameter. 

 The dense, low. thornless tree is a favorite 

 with the Chinese. 



Man-eater shark [Niuhu], 344, 345 



Maneo (sec Papaya) 



Mango, 258, 241 ' 



Blight on the, 242 

 Fruit of, 241 

 Fruiting season of, 241 

 Fungus disease of, 242 

 Propagation of, 242 

 Species of, 242 

 -thrip, 428 

 Varieties of, 242 

 wcevel, 395 



