World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago , 1893. 679 
Department N— Forestry. 
CLASSIFICATION. 
CLASSIFICATION. 
Group 19.—Forestry, Forest Products. 
' Class 99. —Logs and sections of trees; samples of wood and timber of all 
kinds generally used in construction or manufactures, either 
in the rough or hewed, sawed or split, including square 
timber, joists, scantling, plank and boards of all sizes and 
kinds commonly sold for building purposes. Also ship 
timber, as used in ship-buijding, or for masts and spars; 
piles, timber for fencing, for posts, for paving or for timbering 
mines. Miscellaneous collections of wood. 
Class 100.—Worked timber or lumber, in form of clapboards, shingles, 
sheathing or flooring, casings, mouldings, stair rails or parts 
of furniture. 
Class 101.—Ornamental wood used in decorating and for furniture; veneers 
of hard and fancy woods; mahogany logs, crotches and 
veneers; rose-wood; satin-wood, ebony, birdseye maple, 
madrona, black walnut veneers and other fancy woods 
suitable for, and used for ornamental purposes. 
Class 102.—Timber prepared in various ways to resist decay. 
Class 103.—Dyeing, tanning and colouring—dye-woods, barks, and various 
vegetable substances in their raw state, used for dyeing and 
colouring, such as logwood, Brazil wood, peach wood, fustic, 
sumac. 
Barks of various kinds, Brazilian, acacias, oak, hemlock, murici, 
bicida, gordonia. Galls, excrescences and abnormal woody 
products. Mosses used for dyeing and colouring. 
Class 101.—Cellular substances—corks, and substitutes for cork of vegetable 
growth ; porous woods for special uses, pith, rice-paper, etc. 
Class 105.—Lichens, mosses, pulu, ferns, and vegetable substances used for 
bedding, for upholstering, or for mechanical purposes, as 
teazles, Dutch rushes, scouring grass, etc., “Excelsior.” 
Class 106.—Gums, resins, vegetable wax or tallow wax, including caoutchouc, 
gum Senegal, tragacanth, Arabic, mesquite gum, myrrh, 
copal, &c. 
Class 107.—Seeds and fruits, for ornamental purposes ; vegetable ivory, 
coquilla nuts, cocoa-nut shells, ganitrus beads, bottle 
gourds, etc. 
Class 108.—Medicinal: roots, herbs, barks, mosses, berries, etc. 
Miscellaneous products. 
Class 109.—Wood pulp, for making paper and other objects. 
Class 110.—Paper and wooden ware generally, as pails, tubs, platters, brooms, 
coopers’ stock. 
Class 111.—Basket industry—willow-ware, etc. 
Class 112.—Battan, bamboo and cane-work in part. (For rattan furniture, 
see also Group 90.) 
