own a d coconut palms fattening then on the amp as or refuse 
of tapioca manufacture. ?he pips no raised met the -fade 
demand of Malacca and ^era sent to the Federared Malay 
Staten in larye ruirfoorn * hew hrA/ever the export had almost 
ceased and nto fatten the supply for local, demand an 
import of the amp as is required* 
pork 
tfitft the decrease of pig-re&rinp ut' e --rice cf 
1 
ha; 
nearly 
risen KMKMMM 4C -or cent;. 
filer cultivation is sliyhtly on the decrease. It 
has- been cut out of a few rubber estates where it wa; 
a catch 
crop 
, but it 
remains 
in 
many more by reason 
cf the 
s$ron 
p penchant 
vrhi ch 
the 
Chinese who own these 
estates 
h a v 3 
for catch 
■;rc-ps. 
She 
reduction of 
sugar 
f roFi 
the Katony • aln - Arenpa 
s ccharifera- true gal a Mai aka** decreases: ■ ■houph the . air 
'{ 
is" as extensive!v crown as fornerlv* 
. 
Coconut and Areca palms yrcwn with it on no,!ay 
V homestead lands appear to have yielded rather less than 
an average crop in l s 13. !he coconut proves are \i rty 
* 
•vnd ill kept: hut the snail crop -as probably doe to 
climatic causes* 
iho production f pin;p,r has been, below the 
average. The pepper !ocaliy\ '-reduce 1 : only rivets local demand 
•i 
Fruit was yielded in abundance in i?U3. 
f ' 
/ ' i 
fns Malays of K-O.accpi have tried no now crops* 
l?he rice harvest of was a bad one: the 
o 
; 
weather in ms had •■keen n>Vf avcuable to the growing -rop; 
•* it i / 
k ■ . - In 
was«a '.Tore M*h -r.fi ».!is ogitiratorci <».rawn off ?.n tarrsrs 
cn the rubber estates, and ' there ' r as none vr ant of plough 
. ■ / \ 
animals as a result of tl ie binder-est visitation of 
and clear ins; of hillsides / a about # the sources of th« 
