W, B, WHITTINGHAM & CO/8 



PUBLICATIONS. 



91, GRACECHURCH STREET, 

 LONDON. 



%* Agents to Government by Appointment for the Sale of the 

 India Office Publications. 



Fourth Edition, with important Additional Chapcrs. 

 Price los. 6d. 



TEA CULTIVATION AND MANZJFACTUKE. 



By Lieut. -Col. EDWARD MONEY. 



OPINIONS OF THE PRESS ON THE THIRD EDITION. 



The Saturday Review, in the course of an extended notice, 

 says : " We think that Col. Money has done good service by throwing 

 into the form of a book an essay which gained the Prize awarded by 

 the Agricultural and Horticultural Society of India, in 1872. The 

 author is one of a well-known Anglo-Indian family .... He has 

 had plenty of practical experience, and has tested the labours of other 



men Col. Money's general rules and principles, as far as 



we can form a judgment, seem to have reason as well as experience 

 on their side . . . . No tea planter can afford to disregard his 

 experience." 



The Indian Agriculturist says : " Col. Money has advanced 

 with the times, and tne work under review may well be considered the 

 standard work on the subject, and it ought to be in every tea planter's 

 hand in India, Ceylon, Java, Japan, China or America ; the merit and 

 sterling value of his essay has been universally and deservedly 

 acknowledged We recommend our readers who re- 

 quire full information and sound advice on the subject to procure 

 Col. Money's book." 



Allen's Indian Mail says: "The particulars of this great 

 industry, which comprises (Tea) Cultivation and Manufacture, are 

 given in the work of Col. Money. The Third Edition expanded from 

 the original prize Essay published in 1872, by the results of the 

 author's practical experience and observations up to the present time, 

 supplies full details of the origin and progress of an Indian Tea 

 Garden, and that in a very lucid and readable form . . . The 

 publication of so thorough, clear and instructive a directorium as 

 Col. Money's work is in itself a proof of the attention devoted to this 

 important industry, which has a great future before it. No one who 

 desires to understand the condition of its development ; still more no 

 one who has a pecuniary interest in a Tea Garden, can feel that the 

 subject of tea is known until this work has been studied." 



