INDEX. 
117%. Laurel, American, 166; 
Carolina, 168; great, 167; sheep, 
167. Lime, wild, 188. Zinden, 
80; European, 112; white, 112. 
Locust, black, or common, 88; 
honey, 85-87; rose-flowered, 89; 
water, 87; yellow, 87. Magno- 
Ya, 118-122; Cucumber, 118; 
ear-leaved, or ear-leaved umbrel- 
la, 120; great-leaved, 120; ‘‘ pur- 
purea,” 122; small, or sweet bay, 
119; yellow cucumber, 119; yu- 
Jan, 121. Mahogany, 192, 196. 
Maple, box-elder, or ash-leaved, 
79; large-leaved,80; moose-wood, 
or striped,79; Norway,79; round- 
leaved, 80, 81; soft,77,78; sugar, 
48-51, 74-77. ‘‘ Miner’s Cabin,” 
28. Mulberry, 33; black, 127; 
red, 126; white, 127. Oak, 30, 
83; black, 182; black-jack, 183; 
burr, 179; laurel, 183; live, 5, 33, 
183; pin, 182; post,181; red, 182; 
scarlet, 182; Spanish, 183; swamp- 
chestnut, 181; white, 181; wil- 
low, 183. Orange, golden, 205- 
209. Osage orange, 129, 1380. 
Palmyra, 31. Papaw, 139. Pep- 
peridge, 187. Persimmon, date- 
plum, 126. Pine, Austrian, 106; 
Corsican, 106; gray, or scrub, 
103, 104; loblolly, or Oldfield, 
105; pitch, 105; red, 103; Scotch, 
106; scrub, 106; stone, 105; ta- 
ble - mountain, 107; white, 102; 
yellow, 104. Poplar, balsam, 
downy-leaved, 148; white, 149. 
Pride of India, 191. Red-bud, 
144. Redwood, 20. Rose bay, 
167. Sassafras,113. Soap-plant, 
82. Spruce, black,155; hemlock, 
156; Norway, 155; red and blue, 
155; white, 154. ‘‘ The Cypress 
of Montezuma,” 29. ‘‘ The Rid- 
ing School,” 29. ‘‘ The Three 
Sisters,” 28.  ‘‘ Treaty Elm,” 
82. Tupelo,137. Umbrella,120. 
Walnut, 30, 82; black, 71, 72; 
English, 73. ‘‘ Washington,” 28. 
Witlow, brittle, 152; shining, 153; 
weeping, 153; white, 152. Yel- 
low wood, 128. Yew, 80; Amer- 
ican, or ground hemlock, 162; 
English, 162. 
i* 
254 
Trees—ash, uses of, 63-69; attri- 
butes, 37; birch, amount of sap, 
51, 52; birch, pleasant and bitter 
remembrances, 95; bleeding, 47, 
48; budding, 218-220; cedran, 
antidote for poisonous bites, 109, 
110; chestnut, planting and thin- 
ning, 90, 91; circulation of sap, 
47-58; cold winds checked by 
evergreen, 54; cutting, 218-215; 
elm, sap of, 48; elm, shady 
and ornamental, 82-84; essential 
to civilization, 4; evaporation 
through, immense, 10; experi- 
ments on flow of sap, 47-58; 
famous, 27-34; give off heat, 
45; grafting, 220-223; hickory, 
its emblematic character, 97; 
horse-chestnut, list of, 188; in- 
fluence of, on climate, 41-44; 
kinds to plant, 63 et seqg.; layer- 
ing, 215-218; lindens, bark used 
for twine, 112; list of valuable 
timber, 169; locust, varieties and 
uses, 85-89; maple, value of, 74; 
medicinal properties of those of 
United States, 2438-252; moisture 
given off by peach, 10; murder 
of, 8; number of tree-seeds to 
a pound, 170; oak most valu- 
able of all, 179; pine, uses and 
products, 101-107; planting, 15, 
16,226-236; propagation of,210- 
225; pruning, 223-225; rapid 
growth of hardy, 236, 237; sap, 
experiments with regard to, 47- 
53; sap flows from wounds in, 
47; seeding, 211-218; tempera- 
ture of, 45; time from seed to 
maturity, 7; transplanting large, 
240-242; variety of features in, 
37, 38; walnut, profit from, 70; 
warmth and moisture from ever- 
green, 54; will not mature in a 
lifetime, 7. 
Tupelo-tree, 187. 
Vandalism—1, 2, 8; committed by 
corporations, 2, 9, 10. 
Walnut-trees—30,32; black, 71,72; 
English, 78; profit on, 70. 
Walnuts and cannon-balls, 82. 
‘* Washington Tree,” 28. 
