482 
Kef.—Tomato Growing in New Hampshire: Notes on Tomato 
Breeding, Rane and Hunt, New Hampshire. Coll ege, Agric. Exp. 
Station, Bull. No. 42, 1897, pp. 15-26, with particulars of 56 
varieties.— — Tomatoes i in Canary Islands,” in Dip. and Cons. 
Rep. No. 2830, 1902, p. 10.———“‘ The Tomato,” Kyle and Green, 
memes 1. Bota Exp. St. Bull. No. 65, 1903, pp. 1-31. 
ta ageres, Vilmor in-Andrieux, pp. 663-680: ‘illustrated 
p ; , 
Journ. Roy. Soc. Arts, lix. 1911, p. 1123. —— —'* Tomato Preserving 
in France” Loo Dx IOI, p. 1044 ——* Canning cag nnd ex 
Home and in Club Work, Benson, U.S. Dept. Agric. Farm 
Bull. No. 521, 1913, pp. 1-36.—- roa Seed Oil in Italy” 
Journ. Roy. Soc. Arts, lxii. 1914, p. 404. 
SOLANUM, Linn. 
Solanum duplosinuatum, Klotzsch; Fl. Trop. Afr. IV. Sect. 2, 
p. 243. 
Ill.—Wiener, E ens Zeitung, 1896, p. 405, f. 59 B Farini); 
Wood, Nafal Pl. 49. 
ernac. names a fewobamomi (Lagos, sor Wak Bobo- 
awodi te MacLeod, Hislop, Foster); Bore (Sierra Leone, 
Scott Elliot) ; Toongueeza or Toong'goojah (Unyoro, Uganda 
Grant); Beet-y-diau (Yoloff, Heckel); Fous (Natal, Wood). 
Widely distributed in Tropical Africa extending to S. Africa. 
Used as an antidote = M ison in Africa (Holmes, 
Pharm. Journ. [4] x 1907, . 199). Berries used with 
some success as a dy for ringworm (Wood, Natal Pl. i. 
p. 40). 
The variety Me C. H. Wright, is stated = Barter 
(No. 1344, Herb. K Kew) to be cultivated for its fruit—yellow when 
ripe, smooth surface, size of a tomato—in Nup 
OK shrub about 3 ft. high ; all the p spiny (Barter, l.c.) some 
ost unarmed, sometimes bristling with white yellowish 
Piok (Hiern, Cat. Welw. Afr. Pl. iii. p- À 750): found in native 
compound, Lokoja ede Herb. eds very abundafit all over 
interior of Angola (Monteiro, Herb. Kew). 
