Trees, Shrubs and Vines 



mostly inconspicuous, which results in part from its 

 minuteness and partly from its dull coloring. 



INCONSPICUOUS-FLOWERING, NON-AMENTACEOUS 

 TREES 



Sour Gum 



Persimmon 



Sassafras 



Alligator Pear 



Large Tupelo 



Basswood 



Downy-leaved Basswood 



White Basswood 



American Elm 



Slippery Elm 



Corky White Elm 



Winged Elm 



Nettle tree 



Alder Buckthorn 



Planer-tree 



Sweet Gum 



Buttonwood 



Devilwood 



Kentucky Coffee-tree 



Poison Dogwood 



Ailanthus 



Staghom Sumach 

 Hop-tree 

 Angelica-tree 

 White Ash 

 Red Ash 

 Black Ash 

 Green Ash 

 Blue Ash 



Carolina Water Ash 

 Silver-leaf Maple 

 Ash-leaved Maple 

 Sugar Maple 

 Striped Maple 

 Mountain Maple 

 Cut-leaved Maple 

 Honey-locust 

 Water-locust 

 Prickly Ash 

 Red Mulberry 

 White Mulberry 



The amentaceous (catkin-bearing) trees exhibit the 

 lower flower-types as explained above, and the flower- 

 clusters as a rule are not in the least degree ornamental ; 

 but the rule has a few notable exceptions, as in the chest- 

 nut and some of the birches, the graceful effect of whose 

 long, pendent tassels, white or golden, is not inferior to 

 that of many of the more pretentious blossoming trees. 

 In the beech the catkin takes the form of a globular mass. 



