is ad 
implements of hufbandry,—coachmakers, chair~ 
makers, wheelwrights, and carpenters ufes, &cc. &c. 
Hazel.—Sheep-hurdles in Hants, Wilts, and Dor- 
fet; fpars for thatching; peafe and bean fticks, dead 
hedges, &c. &c. : 
Alder, Willow, Birch, Sc.—Poles for rafters, pat- 
tens, clogs, fhoe-heels, turner’s-ware; coalpit ufes, 
(particularly in the Mendip pits in Somerfetfhire) 
rails for fencing, chairmakers ufes, &c. 
Oak.—For rough domeftick ufes; and the bark 
for tanning. 
General ufes of all.—Faggots, particularly for fuel 
in farm-houfes, and for baking ; bavins for lighting 
fires in towns; thorns and refufe for dead hedges; 
and particularly charcoal for thofe manufactories 
to which pit-coal is not applicable, as well as for 
f{toves in kitchens, &c. 
Nature of the Growth of Underwood, Caufe of its 
Decay, &c.—The ftocks (or, as they are ufually 
called in the weftern counties, ‘ Stools’) which 
produce Underwood or Coppice-wood, being in 
fact only pollard trees growing under ground; it is 
obvious that the produce of thofe ftocks mutt, like 
the fhrouds of pollard trees, be the moft abundant, 
when 
