INDEX. 



283 



Colonial produce, Schenk, 256 ; 



Schwarzkopf, 256. 

 at Dublin ExMbition, 



draper, 53. 



at London Exhibition, 



Bunter, 99. 



— rose-farming, Anon. 238. 



— timber, Simmonds, 181. 

 in Haarlem museum, 



Ueden, 58. 

 — woods, SimmondSf 181. 



their tensile strength, 



Fowke, 67. 

 Colonial Magazine, 217. 

 Colonies (British), possibility of 



making !N^eroli in, J)e Vrij, 



51. 

 their textile plants, 



Dickson, 51. 



cotton from the French, 



Anon. 227 ; Poulain, 255, 



agriculture in, 218. 

 sugar in, Scoffern, 175. 



Colonies, reports on. Itefer to 



Accounts and Papers, Indexes, 



art. CoLOXLES. 

 Colophony, Morel, 135. 

 Colorado conifers, LavalUe, 113. 

 Colour from Ehamnus, Fhipson, 



149. 



in madder, Decaisne, 48. 



Colouring matters, Filhol, 63. 

 Columbia. See JSTew Grenada. 

 Colza culture, Lattre, 112. 

 Colza oil, Heu%e, 89. 

 Comfrey as a forage plant, Ritter, 



161. 

 Commerce, its natural history, 



Yeats, 214. 

 Commercial plants. See Economic 



plants and Industrial plants ; 



also the various headings. 

 Commercial produce, vegetable, 



Simmonds, 1»0; Zenker, 214. 

 terms and synonyms, Faulk- 

 ner, 249. 

 Comocladia, properties ascribed to, 



Hamilton, 78. 



Companion to the Pharmacopoeia. 



See Materia medica. 

 Compass plant. Anon. 237. 

 Compositae, medicinal plants of, 



Jackson, 101. 

 Condurango, Anon. 230. 

 Conessine, Saines, 77. 

 Congo tobacco. Anon. 223. 

 Coniferae, turpentines and resins 



of. Morel, 135. 

 Coniferous plants at "Wobum 



Abbey, Forles, 66. 

 hardy in IN'orth Germany, 



Geyer, 70. 

 Coniferous trees attacked by fungi, 



Bartig, 83. 

 Comi&vs, Jacques, 102; Seneelause, 



176. 

 cultiyated for resins, Gihoul, 



250. 



for waste lands, Renault, 158. 



from ITorth America for 



forestry in Germany, Booth, 23. 

 — in Germany, Menkel Sp 

 Mochstetter, 87. 



in Great Britain, Gordon Sf 



Glendinning, 72. 



— in I^ew Zealand, Bay, 85. 



— in the Netherlands, I>e Vbs, 

 248. 



— most in use, Kratzmann, 107. 



— of California and Colorado, 

 LavalUe, 113. 



— of Himalayas, Madden, 123. 



— of large size, Chamhray, 245. 



— of Mid-Europe, Bochstetter^ 

 251. 



— of Spain, Laguna, 109. 



— produce of, Terzi, 191. 

 resins yielded by, Berlant, 



88. 



wood of, Schroeder, 173. 



Conophallus Konjak, Vidal, 198. 



Conservation of forests, Mueller, 

 137. See also Forests and 

 Forestry. 



Convolvulaceae, medicinal pro- 

 perties of, Roessig, 163. 



