565 



Depfc. Agric. U.S.A. 1910, pp. 447-460; Extract in Agric. News, 



. Barbados, xi. Jan. 6th, 1912, p. 5. " Camphor from Cinna- 



momum Carnphora : Cultivation and Preparation in the Fed. 

 Malay States," Eaton, Dept. of Agric. Fed. Mai. States, Bull. 

 No. 15, 1912, pp. 1-38; abstract in Agric. News, Barbados, 



XI. Sept. 14th, 1912, pp. 302-303. "Precisions nouvelles sur 



r exploitation du Camphrier," Baillaud, in Journ. d' Agric. 



Tropicale, xii. Dec. 31st, 1912, pp. 362-367. " Camphor Oil 



and Crude Camphor" from the Fed. Malay States," in Bull. 



Imp. Inst. xi. 1913, pp. 46-48. " Carnphora," in Handb. der 



Pharmacognosy, Tschirch, Lieferung 36, Jan. 20th, 1914, pp. 



1110-1138,^ illustrated. "Investigations on the Camphors of 



Mauritius," Stockdale, Dept. of Agriculture, Mauritius, Bull. 



No. 4, Sci. Series, 1916, pp. 1-14. " Camphor Oil from the 



Fed. Malay States and Mauritius," in Bull. Imp. Inst. xiv. 1916, 

 pp. 577-585 ; abstract in Agric. News, Barbados, xvi. Oct. 6th, 



1917, p. 317. "Camphor Cultivation" in The Perfumery 



and Essential Oil Record, Jan. 1919, p. 3. " On Camphor 



Oil and the Possibility of Increasing Camphor Cultivation in 

 the British Empire," I.e. March, 1919, pp. 57-59; "Synthetic 

 Camphor," I.e. pp. 59-60.—" Camphor," in Report Agric. 



Dept. Dominica, 1918-1919 (Issued 1919) pp. 5-7. " EflFect 



of Removing the Pulp from Camphor Seed on Germination and 

 the subsequent Growth of Seedlings, Russell, U.S. Dept. Agric. 

 pp. 223-238, iUustrated (Govt. Printing Office, Washington, 

 1919); Reprint from Journ. Agric. Research, xvii. Aug. 15, 



1919. " Camphor," in Agric. News, Barbados, xviii. Dec. 13th, 



1919, pp. 385-386. •" Effect of removing the pulp from 



Camphor Seed on Germination and the Subsequent Growth of 



the SeedUngs," Kew BuU. 1920, pp. 45-47. " A Machine for 



Trimming Camphor Trees," Perfumery and Essential Oil Record, 

 June 1920, pp. 226-227. 



Ciunamomum zeylanicum, Nees, in Wall. PI. As. Rar. ii. p. 74. 



A tree 20 ft. and upwards, with dense broad head. Leaves 

 3-6 m. long 2-3 in. broad. Flowers insignificant, yellow, borne 

 in loose panicles near the ends of the branches. Fruit ovoid 

 fleshy set in a cup-like base. 



Ill— Rheede, Hort. Mai. i. t. 57; Bot. Mag. t. 1636 (Laurus 

 Cassia) ; Diet. Sc. Nat. t. 12 {Laurus Cinnamomum) ; Bot. Mag. t. 

 2028 {L. Cinnamomum); Nees von Esenbeck, Plant. Medic. 

 Dusseld. t. 128 {Laurus Cinnamomum) ; Steph. & Ch. Med. Bot. 

 t. 127 {L. Cinnamomum) ; Wight, Ic. PI. Ind. or. i. tt. 123, 128, 

 129, 134; Berg & Schmidt, Darst. & Besclir. Pharm. i. t. 5c- 

 Bedd. Fl. Sylv. t. 262 ; Bentl. & Trimen, Med. PI. t. 224 ; Kohler, 

 Med. Pflan. ; Talbot, For. Fl. Bombay, ii. p. 388, f. 463 ; Bull. 

 Agric. Congo Beige, iv. 1913, p. 194 f. 71 (Plantation at Eala). 



Cinnamon. 



Native of Ceylon; Cultivated on an experimental scale in 

 many countries but hmited to Ceylon, India, and Java as 

 important commercial sources of the bark. 



