Archive image from page 342 of Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches cyclopediaofam04bail Year: 1900 in diameter: bark bright red: branches ascending: Ivs. usually falcate, thickish, distinctly and abruptly mucronate, dark green almve, p;i1h fulvoim sreen or pale green beneath. 'â _â¢- in. I-'iii:: fr. I baccatd


Archive image from page 342 of Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches cyclopediaofam04bail Year: 1900 in diameter: bark bright red: branches ascending: Ivs. usually falcate, thickish, distinctly and abruptly mucronate, dark green almve, p;i1h fulvoim sreen or pale green beneath. 'â _â¢- in. I-'iii:: fr. I baccatd, Japan. Vrry iinihir tn 7' branches more upriLrlir. vi,.â,. -ori, \,.L;,.talile .,. as that J slen- â :< -iroyed the eottee industry in <'â¢â â â¢' ' ' ''. â â ' ' -0 over the tea-gardens of ire yel- Easr,, \ .le|,endent upon them, the ... ,.. . . : 1 eupof Tea. It becomes, uonths a ,|n. ,n,.i, ..| r i:-;:il importance to provide It least , ,il,n.,..ai To these , . -1 '. 1. the diversiflca- â¢i-oraes tion of our ,i,.s. -npplvii,- easv and healthful occupation to ..f .,e,.,ly people, especially women and children, wh< 1 are well adapted for the gen- 10:514. Probably as as Chapm. Bushy tree, 25 ft. high slender, -\ in. long, dark green. erally light labor involved in the growth and manufac- ture of Tea; and converting countless acres of now idle land into blooming and remunerative tea-gardens. Where in Assam was once a dismal jungle, the home of the tiger and cobra, and full of deadlier fevers, almost uninhabited by man and practically worthless, is nowâ thanks to the tea-industryâa fertile, comparatively TEA. The Tea plant is described in this work under Camellia Tliea, together with its varieties Bohea and â¢iridis, of which the former was supposed to yield black Tea and the latter green Tea. Both kinds can be produced from either variety, the dit


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