30 CHAPTER III 



it will fail in a hotter one, as the purple cane of Louisiana formed for many 

 years, under the name of Cheribon, the standard cane of tropical Java. 



A further instance of the connection between variety and climate is to be 

 found in the success of the Uba cane in extra-tropical Natal and Madeira, 

 localities unsuitable for the growth of the canes of the Otaheite type ; in fact 

 it may be said that every locality is suited for the growth of one or another 

 variety to its best advantage. 



REFERENCES IN CHAPTER III 



1. Report on the Rainfall of Barbados, and its influence on the Sugar Crops, 1847- 



1871. 



2. The Sugar Industry of Mauritius. 



3. Reports of the Juries, Exhibition of 1851, p. 63. 



4. Handbuch der Climatologie. 



5. The World's Cane Sugar Industry. 



6. Loc. cit., 5 sup. 



7. Loc. cit., 5 sup. 



8. U.S. Dept. of Agric., Records of the Weather Bureau. 



9. Loc. cit., 2 sup. 



10. Loc. cit., 5 sup. 



11. Stubbs' " Sugar Cane." 



12. H.S.P.A. Ex. Sta., Agric. Ser., Bull. 17. 



13. Loc. cit., 2 sup. 



14. Scientific American Supplement, 1894, 3^> 14.621. 



15. Loc. cit., 2 sup. 



1 6. Jour. Agric. Soc., 1905, i, 28. 



/7. Annales de Geographie, 1914, 14, 109. 



18. Bulletin Economique de V Indo-Chine, 1909, 12, 31. 



19. The Practical Sugar Planter. 



20. La Canne a Sucre. 



21. Culture de la Canne a Sucre a Guadeloupe. 



22. Soils, New York, 1906. 



23. U.S. Dept. of Agric., Bull. 90. 



24. Stubbs' " Sugar Cane." 



