SUBTROPICAL WOODS OF THE UNITED STATES, specially bound and with 

 illustrated text, sliowing bark, foliage, environment, etc.. one Part. 



TROPICAL WOODS OF THE UNITED STATES, specially bound and with illus- 

 trated text showing barks, foliage, etc.. one Part finished and two in preparation. 



COMMERCIAL WOODS, covering the fifty woods which the L'. S. Census returns 

 show to have been most largely manufactured into lumber in one year. In two Parts. 

 one covering the "hard" woods and the other the "soft" woods, specially bound in 

 buckram half morocco. The price of these two Parts is SS each; §15 the two. Patrons 

 having Commercial Woods and afterwards desiring to obtain the full series may hare 

 full credit on same on returning the former to us. 



The following are the woods comprised in Commercial Woods: 



PART I 



PART II 



Ash. Black 

 .\sh. White 

 Bass wood 

 Beech 



Birch. VS^iite 

 Birch. Yellow 

 Cherry 

 Chestnut 

 Cottonwood 

 Dos-wood 

 Elm. Rock 

 Elm. V^'hit.j 

 Gum. Black or 



Gum. Cotton 



Lrum. Red cT ST\-(;et 



Hickor>-. Shag--bark 



Locust 



Maijto-. .?!!%■. -r or Soft 



INIaplo. Suqar or Hard 



Oak. Red 



Oak. White 



S\-camort or Euttijn- 



^"ood 

 Walnut. Black 

 Whit I -wood 

 Willow. Black 



Cedar. Red or Pencil 



Cedar. Pacific Red 



Cedar. Xorth'n White 



Cedar. Soutlt'n V\"ltiie 



Cvpress 



Fir. Balsam 



Fir. r>ougias 



Fir. White 



Hemlock 



Hemlock, ^^\■stern 



Larcli. Tantarack. 



Eastern 

 Larch. V^ t_ stern 



Pine. Lonsr-leaf 

 Pine. Lod£-ei'Ole 

 Pine. Loblolly 

 Pine. XorAvay. Rt<1 

 Pine. Sliort-ieaf 

 Pine. Sug-ar 

 Pine. "Western "Wliite 

 Pine. Western Yellow 

 Pine. Wttite 

 Redwood 

 Spruce. Red 

 Spruce. Sitka 

 S[irttce, y\*itite 



List of woods ftirnished in American Woods, full series, furnished on retiuest. 



-if 



HANDBOOK OF TREES Opened at Red Oak. 



In this way all the trees arp treated. Actual sizes of leaves, fruits, and branchlets 

 are indicated by a background ruled in square inches. "A book of the utmcst value 

 Should be in the hands of everybody tn ho has a patriotic pride in the forests of our 

 country." — Collier's Weekly. 



HANDBOOK OF THE TREES OF THE NORTHERN STATES AND CANADA, 



Photo-descriptive. By Romeyn Beck Hough. I'rice in buckram binding .Su ; in lialt- 



morocco .<S. delixcred. |,r,.>U,ction. When .von hav, s,..n it J-.H, ,vin uendot 



■■ TMth ii one whnlly unfamiliar wiih botany can ibat it is so inexpensive." — Journal of Education. 



easily identify the trfi-s." — Melvil Dewey, ■■ Tlie njost sutisfact-.n-y vi'liini-- I [h'Sscss imi tbe 



'■ Inrlispeiisable fi.'i- all studeuis of trei'S," — Botani- sul'jrct out of a total of some li'>0 books od tliis and 



cal Gazette. kindred snbjeets." — Dean Alvord. N. Y. 



■■Nothing but praise for the wnrk."— The Nation. ■■Tbe m.'st ideal liaudbo..k I liavo i-v.t seen. A 



'^ Extraordinarily iborougb anil aui-aetive. Us ill .s- mod'd in troarmont and exeention." — C. Hart Merriam. 



trations aliui'St earry tlje scent and t'.'ucb of the ■' Ic is doubtful if any b....k placed before tbe public 



original." — New York Times. in riT.nt y^ars p.'ssi ssos ibc p<'<'uliar charm of this 



"A p.'i-frctly dolipbtful 1 k. A source of inspira- llandbi-nk." — St. Louis Lumberman. 



tion til L'Viry ]>'V(.t itf rr,>.s." — -Dr. J. N. Rose. ■■ rni.|Uo, braiuifiil and rMr.ni.dy useful. Des.r'- <! 



■' N\. otLer L'uuk cau Take the place of il,i* masterly a place in the library of every treo-lover." — The D:-*'' 



