[Varieties and description of the tree.]
[Mode of cultivation in the Colombian Republics.]
[Enemies of the tree.]
[Expenses of a plantation in Jamaica.]
[Cultivation in Trinidad and St. Lucia.]
[Statistics and consumption.]
[Home consumption and revenue of coffee.]
[Chicory largely substituted for; history of the fiscal changes.]
[Continental demand.]
[Present produce and consumption in various countries.]
[Cultivation in Mocha.]
[Cultivation in India;] [in Ceylon.]
[Exports from that island.]
[Manures suitable for the tree.]
[Peeling, pulping, and winnowing.]
[Improved machinery.]
[New use for coffee leaves.]
[Culture in Java.]
[Production of America and the West Indies; Venezuela.]
[Statistics of the Brazils.]
[Shipments of various countries to the United States.]
[Comparative consumption by different nations.]
[Cultivation in Jamaica; Trinidad; British Guiana; Cuba; decline of production in this island.]
[Statistics of exports.]
[Preparation of coffee leaves for infusion according to Dr. Gardner's patent.]
[Dr. Hooker's opinion thereon.]
[Immense consumption of.]
[Liebig's analysis of.]
[Varieties of the plant.]
[Imports of tea for a series of years.]
[Alterations in the duties.]
[Statistics of import and consumption, revenue and prices.]
[Value and extent of the tea exported from China; first cost at the ports; enormous prices paid for superior teas.]
[Total outlay for tea.]
[Consumption of tea in China.]
[Export to various countries.]
[Total production.]
[Consumption per head in England; not properly within the reach of the poorer classes.]
[China could furnish any quantity.]
[Mr. Travers on the tea duties.]
[Brick tea of Thibet.]
[Tea annually imported into the United States; proportion of green to black.]
[Range of the plant.]
[Countries in which its culture has been attempted.]
[Its progress in America.]
[The Assam Company and its plantations.]
[Extension of tea culture by the East India Co.]
[Mr. Fortune's travels in the tea] [districts of China.]
[Instructions and details as to soil, management and manufacture, by Dr. Jameson and Mr. Fortune.]
[Dr. Campbell's notes.]
[Mr. A. Macfarlane's Report.]
[The East India tea plantations in the North-West Provinces.]
[Experimental cultivation of the tea plant in Brazil; M. Geullemin's report thereon.]
[Paraguay Tea: Mr. Robertson's description of the collection and manufacture.]
[Plants from which it is usually obtained.]
[The sugar cane; its range of cultivation.]
[Production in our colonies.]
[Consumption in the last ten years.]
[Improvements in sugar machinery and manufacture.]
[Quantity of cane sugar annually produced and sent into the markets.]
[Local consumption in India.]
[Present European supply; demand according to the consumption in England.]
[Estimated annual production throughout the world.]
[Consumption in the principal European countries.]
[Average annual consumption in the United Kingdom.]
[Comparative amount of beet-root and cane sugar produced in the last four years. Gazette prices of sugar in the last ten years.]
[Production of sugar in the United States.]
[Production in Cuba.]
[Production in the British West Indies.]
[Production in Mauritius.]
[Statistics of imports from the Mauritius.]
[Production in the British East Indies.]
[Production in Java.]
[Production in the Philippines.]
[Chemical distinction between cane and grape sugar.]
[Varieties of the sugar cane cultivated.]
[Possibility of raising the cane from seed.]
[Analysis of the cane, and of a sugar soil.]
[Chemical examination of cane juice.]
[Vacuum pans.]
[Boiling and tempering.]
[Composition of cane juice.]
[Ramos's prepared plantain juice.]
[Professor Fownes on the manufacture of sugar.]
[Expression of cane juice.]
[Construction of the sugar mill.]
[Quantity of juice obtained by each kind of mill.]
[Position of rollers.]
[Mode of culture and varieties in the East Indies.]
[Soils considered best adapted for its luxuriant growth.]
[Manures.]
[Sets and planting.]
[Aftergrowth.]
[Harvesting.]
[Injuries, from seasons, storms, insects, &c.]
[Mode of cultivation in the Brazils; in Natal; expenses.]
[Comparison between the cost of production in Mauritius and Natal.]
[Comparative cost in free and slave countries.]
[Beet-root sugar: variety cultivated; mode of expression and manufacture; yield of sugar; estimated profit; extensive production in France; production in the German States.]
[Statistics of the Prussian Provinces of Saxony; Russia, Belgium and Austria.]
[A Visitor's account of the French manufactories.]
[Mr. Colman's opinion.]
[Proportion of sugar in the beet.]
[Maple Sugar: description of the tree; its production limited to America; extent of the manufacture in Canada and the United States; processes employed; statistics of production.]
[Maize Sugar.]
[Statistics of Wheat Culture.]
[Exports of flour from the United States.]
[Adaptation of the soil and climate of the United States to the culture of the cereals.]
[Export of sophisticated (damaged) flour.]
[Kiln drying of bread stuffs and exclusion of air.]
[Value of the "whole meal" of wheat as compared with that of the fine flour.]
[Nutritious properties of various articles of food.]
[Composition of wheat and wheat-flour, and the modes of determining their nutritive value.]
[Rotation of crops in connexion with wheat culture.]
[Production and consumption of the United Kingdom.]
[Statistics of other countries.]
[Barley, Oats, Rye, Buckwheat, Maize: Indian corn and meal imported.]
[Crop and exports of United States.]
[System of culture].
[Rice: Statistics of production and culture in Carolina.]
[The Bhull rice lands of Lower Scinde.]
[Rice in Kashmir; exports from Arracan.]
[Millet.]
[Broom Corn.]
[Chenopodium Quinoa.]
[Fundi or Fundungi.]
[Pulse.]
[The Sago Palms.]
[Manufacture and extent of the trade in Singapore.]
[The bread-fruit tree.]
[Kafir bread.]