ISO ECONOMIC BOTANY OF ALABAMA. 



MISCELLANEOUS FOREST LXDL'STRIES. 



Fig. .")?. Turpentine still utilizing the gum from about 

 70,000 "boxes" — or rather cujis in this case, — southwest of 

 Brookwood, Tuscaloosa Co. At the left is the shop where 

 the rough pine barrels for rosin are made, a necessary adjunct 

 of every turpentine still. Some rosin strainers are lying on 

 the ground at the right. In the foreground is a runway on 

 which the barrels are rolled out to the road. April 15, 1911. 



Fig. 58. Charcoal ovens at Childersburg. Talladega Co. 

 One is being filled with wood and one is burning. Feb. 3, 

 1913. 



Fig. 59. Cedar posts and ])oles awaiting shi])ment at Wood- 

 ville. Tackson Co. March 15, 1913. 



Fig. (50. Small sawmill cuttmg about L;!,OoO feet a day. of 

 short-leaf pine and hardwoods, on L. & N. R. R. about four 

 miles east of Tuscaloosa. Feb. 22, 1913. 



