INDEX. 253 



Cornell University, 190. 



Cornwall, potatoes, 89 note. 



Cotton, Sir A., Lecture on Agriculture, 236 ; Rothamsted challenge, 236. 



Cotton industry, its growth in different countries, 34. 



Courtois-Gerard, Manuel de culture maraichere, 64 note, 65. 



Crisis, industrial, of 1886-87, 2 9- 



Daily Telegraph, correspondence on German competition, 18 



Darwin, 204, 205. 



Davy, Humphrey, mechanical theory of heat, 203. 



Dellavos, methods of technical training, 190. 



Derbyshire, petty trades, 136. 



Dessprer, Fl., on planted wheat, 99, 100, 236. 



Devon, South, 89 note. 



Division of labour, i, 214. 



Dodge, J. R., American competition, 76; Annual Report on Agriculture, 



76; Farm and Factory, preface v., 76; industries of the United 



States, 29. 



Du Camp, Maxima, 160 note. 

 Dudley, chain makers, 136. 

 Dumazet, Ardouin, Voyage en France; agriculture, 105, 106, 108, 109; 



petty trades in France, 144, 146-149, 151, 152, 158. 

 Dundee, jute trade, 26. 

 Dybowski, Prof., on French market-gardening, 64. 



Economical Journal, 26. 



Economist, 14 note, 26. 



Education, integrated, 188. 



Electricity, in the service of the petty trades, 154, 156 ; theory of, 208. 



Engel, statistical researches, 216. 



English Illustrated Magazine, 136 note. 



Esmarck, 204 note. 



Euvert, V., industries at St. Etienne, 243 note. 



Exports from the United Kingdom, 32. 



Factories and fields, 217. 

 Falle, Jersey, 232. 



Fesca, Dr. M., work on Japanese agriculture, 239 note, 240. 



Fitzroy, weather forecasts, 209. 



Flanders, East, agriculture, 60, 87. 



Flux, Mr., position of United Kingdom in international trade, 226. 



Fodder plants, various crops of, 62 note. 



Food, labour required t~ grow it, 217 seq. 



Forum, preface vi. 



Fougere*, domestic industries, 147. 



France, chief imports, 221; growth of industries, 9 ; growth of popula- 

 tion and of wheat crop since 1789, 85 ; land, use made of, 53 ; petty 

 trades: basket making, 152; combined with small farming, 148; 

 cottons, 146; cutlery, 151; drills, 145; hardware and locks, 150; 

 iron goods, 150; lace making, 145 ; linen handkerchiefs, 146; marble 

 goods, 149; numbers of people employed in, 141; pottery, 151; 

 weaving in hand looms, 142, 145 ; wood work, 149, 150; in Brittany, 

 148; in Nievre and Haute Marne, 150; in Normandy, 144, 149; in 

 the Jura hills, 152-154; in the Lyons region, 155 seq., and appendix 

 O ; at Paris, 159, and appendix P. 



