184 TKAN'SACTIOXS OF KOYAL Sf'OTTISII AKHORICULTURAL SOCIKTY. 



1:J. .Mahogany (Hoiuliiras), iisfd for levers, littini^s lor anunuiiitioii 

 boxes, cratlles lor }'aek saddles, tackle Mocks, and patterns. 



14. Elm (Great Britain), used for gnn carriaffes, windlasses, railwaj^ 

 trucks, naves of wheels, and tackle blocks. 



15. Oak (African, Sierra Leone), used for windlasses, gun carriages, 

 bollards, rollers, (juoins, and mortar beds. 



16. Cedar (Mexico), used for panels of ofiice waggons, linings of fuse 



boxes, models, and pattern work. 



17. Oak (Jlemel), used for barrels, kegs, and rounds of ladders. 



18. Hickory (North America), used for waggons, forage and maltese 

 carts, levers, sponge and rammer staffs, and ribs of jiontoon 

 boats. 



19. Poplar (Great Britain), used for cutting boards for collar makers. 



20. Ash (Great Britain), used for felloes of wheels, sponge and rammer 

 staffs, handspikes, barrows, and hoops for casks. 



21. Oak (Riga), used for barrels, kegs, and rounds of ladders. 



22. Oak (Great Britain), used for frames of waggons, carts, and barrows, 

 spokes of wheels, and gun carriages. 



23. Elm, Wych (Great Britain), used for barge and boat work. 



24. Sycamore (Great Britain), used for cutting boards. 



25. Pine, Yellow (Quebec), used for pattern work, pontoon boats, sides 

 of waggons, and medical boxes. 



26. Pine, Kauri (New Zealand), used for pontoon equipment, tressel 

 bridging, and saddle beams. 



27. Pine, Oregon (Oregon), used for superstructure for bridging purposes. 



28. Deal, Yellow (Petersburg), used for coal trucks, stretchers, and 

 ammunition boxes. 



29. Deal, Yellow (Gefle), used for signal rocket sticks, tool chests, poles, 

 buckets, and ammunition boxes. 



30. Boxwood (West Indies), used for mallets and measuring rods. 



31. Abele (Great Britain), used for provision boxes and cutting boards. 



32. Birch (Canada), used for barrack furniture. 



33. Teak, Moulmein (Burmah), used for gun carriages and platforms. 



34. Ebony, Black (Ceylon), used for turnery work. 



35. Padouk (Burmah), used for bollards, windlasses, gun carriages, 

 rollers, quoins, and mortar beds. 



36. Walnut (Italy), used for felloes of wheels for tropical climates, and 

 pack saddles for mountain service. 



37. Greenheart (South America), used for gun carriages, mortar beds, 

 windlasses, quoins, bollards, and rollers. 



38. Lignum Vita; (West Indies), used for sheaves of tackle blocks, for 

 rollers, and for stretchers. 



39. Iron Bark (Australia), used for gun carriages, mortar beds, wind- 

 lasses, bollards, rollers, and quoins. 



40. Sabieu (Cuba), used for gun carriages, mortar beds, bollards, rollers, 

 and quoins. 



41. Fir (Russia), used for pontoon equipment, gun platforms, and mortnr 

 beds. 



