Northwest of the Paver Ohio. 150 



Mulberry Trees, growing on bottoms and rich uplands, 

 eighteen inches diameter. 



Cr^b Apple Trees, producing very plentifully of small 

 fruit, and growing from six to fourteen inches diameter. 



A variety of Plumb Trees, growing from seven to eight 

 inches diameter, and bearing fine fruit. 



White Thorn, very plenty, in the low grounds of creeks 

 and cold land, from four inches to twelve in diameter. 



Black Haw, four inches diameter, ■ and producing good 

 fruit. Eed Haw. 



Tapaw, from six feet to twenty in height and six inches 

 diameter, growing on rich shaded bottoms and north sides 

 of hills, in best lands, and producing a most luscious fruit, 

 in bunches or clusters of threes and fives, resemblin^r cu- 



o 



cumbers of about four inches, except that the ends are 

 more round. They have in them seven large seeds, of the 

 bigness and colour of tamarind stones, and the leaves of the 

 tree are very large, long, and like an inverted spear. 



Service Trees, to twelve inches diameter, and producing 

 a red fruit of the berry kind, much admired by the bears, 



and for which they are very often broken down by those 

 animals. , * 



Hazel. Alder, Elder, Large Laurel, Nine Bark, Spice, 

 and Leather Wood Bushes. Leather Wood bark is an ex- 



-^ 



cellent substitute for cord, - answering on many occasions 

 (particularly ill packing) all the purposes of hempen 

 strings : it grows only in low and very rich lands. 



xxn. 



±;' 



