. American journal of pharmacy. according to his reports, as an oil-plant in Kandeshof the Presidency of Bombay, in the districts of Nagpur, Sagar,Oabalpur, and Karnul, and in Ajmere of Radschputana. Ac-cording to one opinion, the two oils are produced by different stagesof development, according to another by different varieties of thesame species. The most valviable substitute for rose-oil is undoubtedly thepelargonium-oil, which is obtained from the rose-geranium. Thename of this geranium dates from the time when the two generageranium and pelargonium had not yet been separated. Linne class


. American journal of pharmacy. according to his reports, as an oil-plant in Kandeshof the Presidency of Bombay, in the districts of Nagpur, Sagar,Oabalpur, and Karnul, and in Ajmere of Radschputana. Ac-cording to one opinion, the two oils are produced by different stagesof development, according to another by different varieties of thesame species. The most valviable substitute for rose-oil is undoubtedly thepelargonium-oil, which is obtained from the rose-geranium. Thename of this geranium dates from the time when the two generageranium and pelargonium had not yet been separated. Linne classedmost of the geraniaceae as geranium; IHeritier was the first to sepa-rate, in 1787-1788, the species pelargonium and erodium fromgeranium. CLASSIFICATION OF THE PLANT. Gintl (p. 268) pointed out in iSj^) that the French rose-oil is manufactured from Pelargonium radula, that of Algeria from P. roseum and P. odoratissimum. The French oil is said to polarize light to the right, the Algerian, to the left. According to ITeuze (


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