174 



Cultivator, Sept. 15th, 1902, p. 51. — "Indian Mangos," Maries, in 

 Journ. Roy. Hort. Soc. xxvi. 1901-02, pp. 755-770, with descrip- 

 tions and illustrations of the following choice varieties : " Nak 

 kua " or Nose Mango ; " Afooz " or " Alfonzo " ; " Durbhungah," 

 Bombay ; " Fukura " or " Fakir Walla " Amun of Gwalior ; 

 " Peary," " Pairi," " Peter," or " Perara," Bombay ; " Shah 

 Pusund " ; " Ennurriva " ; " Ameer Golan " or " Gola," Madras ; 

 " Yalajah Pusund," Madras ; " Dharma " ; " Buckley's Gowraya," 

 Maldah and Durbhungah ; " Barka " ; " Rhari Budaya," Dur- 

 bhungah ; and " Mohur Takoor." — " Mangifera indica," in Manual 

 of Indian Timbers, Gamble, pp. 211, 212 (Sampson Low, Marston 

 & Co., Ltd., London, 1902) ; including an Analysis of the Ash of 

 Sapwood and Heartwood. — " The Mango in Porto Rico," Collins, 

 U.S. Dept. of Agric. Bureau of Plant Industry, Bull. No. 28, 1903, 

 pp. 1-36. Covering origin ; description ; culture, including 

 methods of propagation by seed, inarching, layering and patch- 

 budding, and uses. Descriptions and illustrations of the following 

 forms : " Mango de Mayaguez," " Mangotina," " Melocoton," 

 "Mango de rosa," " Pina," "Largo," "Mango," " Jobos," " Re- 

 dondo," &c. Packing and shipping, with illustration showing 

 method of packing and a few notes on the market ; 15 plates. — 

 " The' Mango," in The Propagation of Tropical Fruit Trees and 

 other Plants, Oliver, U.S. Dept. of Agric. Bull. No. 46, 1903, 

 Bureau of Plant Industry, pp. 8-15 ; prospects as a fruit tree ; 

 propagation in India ; propagating tests at the Department : best 

 age for wood, thick bark of Mango an obstacle in budding, knife 

 for budding the Mango, methods which show best results, apply- 

 ing the buds, when to bud, selection of budding material, raising 

 seedling stocks, transplanting young seedlings, importing Mango 

 scions. — " Mango Bark from Demerara," with Chemical Analysis, 

 in Tech. Rep. and Sci. Papers, Imp. Inst. 1903, pp. 200, 201.— 

 "On the Budding of Mangos," Harris, Bull. Dept. Agric. Jamaica, 

 1903, pp. 253-255.—" Mangoes," I.e. pp. 262-263, giving pro- 

 portional parts of the fruit of "No. 11," "Yam," "Bombay," 

 " Black," and chemical composition of same. — The Mango : 

 Its Cultivation and Varieties, in Trop. Agric. Ceylon, 1903, 

 pp. 156, 157. — " Mangifera indica," in Man. Gard. India, Fir- 

 minger, pp. 256-261 (5th ed. Cameron ; Thacker Spink & Co., 

 Calcutta, 1904). — "Starch of the Mango," Buttenshaw, in 

 West Indian Bull. v. Iy04, pp. 20-22, with micrograph 

 (f. 5) of starch of the Mango seed x 300 ; and micrograph 

 (f . 6) of starch of the Green Mango x 300.—" The Mango : Its 

 Culture and Varieties," Marshall Woodrow, pp. 1-32, including 

 descriptions of 80 famous Mangoes ; illustrated (Alexander 

 Gardner, Paisley ; H. G. Cook, 41, Wellington Street, Covent 

 Garden, London, 1904). — " Mangos at the Colonial and Indian 

 Exhibition," in Bull. Misc. Information, Roy. Bot. Gardens, 

 Trinidad, .1 905, pp. 240, 241.—" The Mango Weevil " (Crypto- 

 rhynchus mangiferae, Fabr.), Maxwell-Lefroy, in Agric. Journ. 

 India, 1906, pp. 164, 165, with illustration of beetle. — " Le Greffage 

 du Manguier," in Journ. d'Agric. Tropicale, Paris, May, 1906, 

 pp. 138-140. — " Gum-Resin of the Mango," Hooper, in Pharm. 

 Journ. [4] xxiv. 1907, p. 718. — " Mangifera indica," in Comm. 

 Prod. India, Watt, pp. 764, 765 (John Murray, London, 1908).— 

 " Mangoes in Ceylon," Macmillan, in Trop. Agric. Ceylon, 1908, 



