<h2><SPAN name="THE_COCOA-NUT" id="THE_COCOA-NUT"></SPAN>THE COCOA-NUT.</h2>
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<p class="drop-cap">THE fruit of the cocoa-nut palm,
(<i>Cocos nucifera</i>), which is the
most useful tree of all its tribe
to the natives of the regions
in which it grows, is one of the most
valuable and important of commercial
products. On the Malabar and Corvomandel
coasts of India the trees grow
in vast numbers; and in Ceylon, which is
peculiarly well situated for their cultivation,
it is estimated that twenty millions
of the trees flourish. The wealth
of a native in Ceylon is estimated by
his property in cocoa-nut trees, and Sir
Emerson Tennent notes a law case in a
district court in which the subject in
dispute was a claim of the twenty-fifth
twentieth part of an acre of palms. The
tree is very beautiful and lofty, growing
to a height of from sixty to one
hundred feet, with a cylindrical stem
which attains a thickness of two feet.
It terminates in a crown of graceful
leaves. The leaf sometimes attains a
length of twenty feet, consists of a
strong mid-rib, whence numerous long,
acute leaflets spring, giving the whole,
as one traveler described it, the appearance
of a gigantic feather. The fruit
consists of a thick external husk or rind
of a fibrous structure, within which is
the ordinary cocoa-nut of commerce.
The nut has a very hard, woody shell,
inclosing the kernel, within which again
is a milky substance of a rather agreeable
taste.</p>
<p>The cocoa-nut palm is so widely disseminated
throughout tropical countries
that it is impossible to distinguish
its original habitat. It flourishes with
equal vigor on the coast of the East
Indies, throughout the tropical islands
of the Pacific, and in the West Indies
and tropical America. It is most at
home, however, in the numerous small
islands of the Pacific Ocean. Its wide
dissemination is accounted for by the
shape of the fruit, which, dropping into
the sea from trees growing along the
shores, would be carried by the tides
and currents to be cast up and to vegetate
on distant coasts.</p>
<p>The uses to which the various parts
of the cocoa-nut tree are applied in the
regions of their growth are almost endless.
The nuts supply a considerable
proportion of the food of the people,
and the liquor enclosed within them
forms a pleasant and refreshing drink.
The liquid may also be boiled down to
sugar. When distilled it yields a spirit
which is known as "arrack." The trunk
yields a timber which is known in commerce
as porcupine wood, and is used
for building, furniture, and firewood;
the leaves are plaited into fans and
baskets, and for thatching roofs of
houses; the shell of the nut is employed
as a water vessel, and the outer husk or
rind yields the fiber which is used for
the manufacture of ropes, brushes, cordage
and the like. Cocoa-nut-oil is an
important article of commerce. It is
obtained by pressing or boiling the
kernels, which are first broken up into
small pieces and dried in the sun. It is
estimated that one thousand full-sized
nuts will produce upwards of twenty-five
gallons of oil. The oil is a white, solid
substance at ordinary temperature, with
a peculiar rather disagreeable odor. Under
pressure it spreads into a liquid and
a solid, the latter being extensively used
in the manufacture of candles.</p>
<p>Within late years the oil has also
been manufactured into cocoa-nut butter,
retaining, however, in a greater or
less degree a distinct flavor of the nut.</p>
<p>The monkeys and orang-outangs are
very expert in destroying the tough
outer covering of the cocoa-nut, though
quite two inches thick. They insert their
teeth into the tapering end of the nut,
where the shell is very uneven, hold it
firmly with the right foot, and with the
left tear the covering to pieces. Then
thrusting a finger into one of the natural
apertures they pierce a hole, drink
the milk, break the shell on some hard
object and eat the kernel.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</SPAN></span></p>
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