TO OUR READERS. 
In closing the Twenty-third Volume of the " Tropical Agriculturist," Tve ^vould 
as usual direct attention to the large amount of useful information afforded and to the 
great variety of topics treated in the several numbers. From month to month, we have 
endeavoured to embody in these pages the latest results of practical experience and 
scientific teaching in all that concerns tropical agriculture; and our ambition has been to 
make this periodical not only indispensable to the planter, but of service to business-men 
and capitalists, never forgetting that agriculture trenches upon every department of human 
knowledge, beside being the basis of personal and communal wealth. 
While directing our attention chiefly to the products prominently mentioned on 
our title-page, we have always taken care to notice minor industries likely to fit in with 
sub-tropical conditions ; and our readers have an ample guarantee in the index pages before 
them, that, in the future, no pains will be spared to bring together all available information 
both from the West and East, the same being examined in the light of the teachings of 
common sense as well as of prolonged tropical experience in this, the leading Crown and 
Planting Colony of the British Empire. 
Special attention has, for a few years back, been given to the introduction and 
* extension in Ceylon, the Straits, Burmah, &c., of an industry in rubber-yielding trees (more 
especially in the planting of Hevea and Castilloa trees,) and much literature on the subject 
will be found throughout our pages ; also on cacao in Central America and the West Indies 
as well as in Ceylon; to "Spices'' of various kinds (nutmegs, camphor, &"c.) ; to palms, 
especially " coconuts " in different districts ; to coffee and aUied products in Brazil, alexico, 
Costa Eica, East Java, Nyassaland, British Central Africa ; Liberian Coffee in Sumatra, 
Java, the Straits Settlements ; and to other new developments in palms and tobacco plant- 
ing, &c., in the Malayan Peninsula, Sumatra and North Borneo, as well as in this Island. 
The Tea-planting Industry has sprung into so much importance in India (South 
as well as North) and Ceylon, as also in Java, that a considerable amount of space is 
naturally given to this great staple ; and with reference to all Companies' Reports, to Sales 
and Prices, as well as to hints for economising, we think it will be admitted by impartial 
judges that the Tropical ^Agriculturist should be filed, for the convenience of planters, in 
every Tea Factory in this Island, in India, and in Java. 
A full and accurate Index affords the means of ready reference to every subject 
treated in this, the Twenty-third Volume, which we now place in our subscribers' hands, 
in the full confidence that it will be received with an amount of approval, at least equal to 
that which has been so kindly extended to its predecessors. 
To show how fully other Products besides Tea are treated in this volume, we may 
mention the number of entries under several headings as follows : — Cotton 50 ; Cacao 
35 ; Indiarubber 200 ; many besides to Gutta Percha ; to Coconuts and other Palms, Rice 
and other Grain, Cinchona, Camphor, Cloves, Fibres, Tobacco, Fruits and Miscellaneous 
Products over 1,000. In the 23 volumes, the references to Rubber, Cacao and Coffee 
number many thousands, as also to Coconuts and other Palms. 
A " Topical Index " to the twenty-three volumes is now in active course of 
preparation, and we trust to publish it before long. 
We are convinced that no more suitable or useful addition can be made to a 
Planting Company's Library or gift to a tropical planter or agriculturist, whether he be 
about to enter on his career, or with many years of experience behind him, than the 
twenty-three volumes of our periodical which we have now made available. They are full 
of information bearing on every department and relating to nearly ever product within the 
scope of sub-tropical industries. 
In conclusion, we have to tender our thanks to readers and contributors, and om- 
wish that all friends manj' continue to write instructively and to read with approval : for 
then, indeed, must the " Tropica,! Agriculturist" continue to do well. 
Colombo, Ceylon; 1st July, 190i 
