311 
value £47 (included in t . Prov ures) destined for the 
United Kingdom (Govt. Gaz. S. N igeria, May 17th, 1911, a 
Appendices Biii.), doubtless included in the 
d 
bove, an 
apparently the greater proportion, as the total from these sources 
only amounted to 344 ewt. value £715. 
amounted to 9,500,000 hags (Cons. Rep. Ann. No. 4700, 1911 
together with the production, should be given. Further informa. 
tion may be obtained from the numerous works on the industry 
d 
Ref.—** On the African Species of the genus Coffea," Hiern, 
in Trans, Linn. Soc. 2nd series, i. 1 , pp. 169-176. Fro 
and Consumption, Thurber, pp. 1-416 (American Grocer Pub- 
pid rr Kot z 
Delden Läerne, with plates, maps and diagrams, pp. 1-637 (W. 
H. Allen and Co., London: Martinus Nijhoff, The Hague, 1885). 
Coffee: Its Cultivation and Profit, Arnold, pp. 1-270 (Whit- 
the Federal Gov nt, and ratified in the Taubaté Treaty in February, 
1906, by the Presidents of Sao Paulo, Minas Geraes and Rio de Janeiro It 
urged by planters and bankers of the country (to whom most of 
rohibiti 
bove a certain amount—10,000,000 bags in 1910-11 (Cons. Rep. Ann. No 
v 
*coffee throughout the world. 
