WOOD-USING INDUSTRIES OF MARYLAND 43 



Spanish cedar Cuba, Mexico. 



Spruce Maine, Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia. 



Sugar maple Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New 

 Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, 

 West Virginia. 



Sugar pine California, Oregon. 



Sweet birch Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, North 

 Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia. 



Sycamore Maryland, Tennessee, Virginia. 



Teak India. 



Tulipwood Australia. 



Tupelo Alabama, North Carolina. 



White birch Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, 

 Rhode Island, Vermont. 



White cedar Maryland, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, 

 Virginia. 



White elm Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio, Virginia, West 

 Virginia. 



White oak Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Indiana, Kentucky, Lou- 

 isiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, New 

 York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, 

 Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia. 



White pine Canada, Michigan, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, 

 Virginia, West Virginia, Wisconsin. 



Yellow buckeye Tennessee, West Virginia. 



Yellow poplar Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, North Car- 

 olina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, 

 West Virginia. 



USES BY SPECIES. 



The manufacturers in Maryland reported the use of fifty-four dif- 

 ferent woods. The principal purposes for which each is employed in 

 the State are shown in the list which follows : 



Ash Antique furniture, balusters, brackets, cabinets, carriage bodies, 

 cart shafts, ceiling, chiffoniers, china closets, cupboards, dowels 

 for bending in reedwork, extension tables, fixtures for stores and 

 offices, flooring, frames for boats, library tables, molding, organs, 

 pianos, stair work, tillers for canal boats, wagon frames, wheels. 

 Balsam fir Doors, house-trim, sash. 



