TIMBER TREES STREAMS. 1 I 1 



Salii,* Ebony,f Dhamun, Neem, Tamarind, Mango, 

 Jamin, Behra,J Kawah, &c. in vast profusion. The 

 Teak and Mowah grow very large. Ebony very 

 fine. || 



24th. The roads are hardly passable along the 

 valley of the Nerbuddah, in the rains, towards Bai- 

 tool and Nagpore. Soil more light and more passable ; 

 but there are no made roads in the district in any 

 direction. 



25th. There are many hundred little streams 

 which run into the Nurbudda from the south. 



26th.- Water carriage from Nursingpore down to 

 Hindia, used for corn and salt, along the Nurbudda ; 

 but not so much as it should be. 



27th. We have in no way improved the manufac- 

 tures here since we got the country ; the commerce 

 may have improved ; and as the population has in- 

 creased, the agriculture is more extended ; but as 

 primitive as heretofore. 



* Boswellia thurifcra ? t Diospyros cbcnum. I Azadiracta Indica. 

 Tcrminalia Belrica ? 



|| The bastard Ebony tree of Central India, and also many other of 

 the forest trees which abound there yield large quantities of rich and 

 valuable gums. The writer of this note collected as many as fifteen 

 varieties, when a resident in that part of the country. 11. II. S. 



