748 HARDIN COUNTY, OHIO. 



ter, and as soon as the ground can be worked in the Springs 

 phmt them out in rows as above directed. They should be 

 covered witli light soil, not deeply, from one-eighth of an inch 

 to one inch. If the seeds are sprouted, they will make an 

 early and strong growth. 



The following list of trees contains all of the most valua- 

 ble trees for Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, etc. : 



Sugar maple, black sugar maple, silver maple, red maple, 

 mountain maple, rough buckeye, smooth buckeye, pawpaw, 

 berberry, wliite birch, poplar birch, weeping birch, canoe birch, 

 sweet birch, water beech, black hickory, shell-bark hickory, 

 large-bark hickory, small-fruited hickory, thick shell-bark 

 hickory, bitternut hickory, choke cherry, wild black cherry, 

 green dogwood, large white dogwood, white-berried dogwood, 

 red-twigged dogwood, leather wood, trailing wahoo, American 

 beech, white ash, blue ash, black ash, red ash, honey locust, 

 thornless honey locust, small-pod honey locust, coffee tree, 

 black- walnut, cucumber tree, butternut, red mulberry, box 

 elder, iron wood, buttonwood, Winterberry, wild plum, bird 

 cherry, mountain ash. Western crab-apple, American aspen, 

 Cottonwood, angled cotton wood, white oak, chestnut oak, swamp 

 oak, Spanish pin oak, red oak, hybrid oak, burr-oak, mossy 

 burr-oak, olive burr-oak, bush willow, black willow, brittle 

 willow, common and red elder, meadow-sweet bladder-nut, 

 American basswood, white elm, slippery elm, rock elm, prickly 

 ash. 



