USES OF PRINCIPAL WOOFS. 
337 
Table CLXXIV.— continued. 
Balata 
Beech . 
Beefwood, or She 
Oak . 
Blackwood . 
Blue Gum . 
Boco . 
Boxwood 
Camara 
Camphor, or Ivapor 
Canella-preta 
Carapo 
Cedar, Cuba, Mexi¬ 
can & Honduras 
Cedar, Bermudian. 
,, Florida 
,, Pencil 
Celery-topped Pine 
Chestnut 
Chow . 
Ebene . 
,, rouge 
,, verte . 
Elm, Common 
,, Wych . 
,, Dutch 
,, Canada Rock 
Emu . 
Fir, Dantzic 
,, Eliasberg 
,, Saldowitz 
WHERE GROWN. 
French Guiana 
Britain 
j Australia . 
5J • 
99 • 
French Guiana 
Australia . 
Brazil 
Borneo 
Brazil 
Trinidad . 
V. Diemen’sLand 
Britain 
Borneo 
French Guiana 
Britain 
Canada 
Australia . 
Prussia 
North Europe 
A substitute for hard woods in 
architectural works, furniture, 
&c. 
Cabinet and chair making, piles, 
wedges, turnery. 
Furniture, domestic arts. 
Wheelwrights’ and turners’ work. 
Architectural works, piles, fences, 
general purposes. 
Constructive purposes, furniture, 
turnery. 
Sheaves for pulleys, mallets, 
turnery, &c. 
Boat-building. 
Planks, beams, piles, constructive 
purposes generally. 
Constructive purposes generally. 
A substitute for plain and inferior 
Mahogany. 
Cabinet work generally, cigar boxes, 
patterns, &c. 
,, boat-building, &c. 
99 99 
,, pencil making. 
See Pine. 
Carpenters’, wheelwrights’, and 
coachmakers’ work, domestic 
arts, &c. 
Planks, beams, piles, constructive 
purposes generally. 
Furniture, domestic arts, turnery. 
Ships’ keels, bilge planks, wheel¬ 
wrights’ and carpenters’ work, 
carving and turnery. 
Do., specially adapted for boat¬ 
building. 
99 * 99 
Ship-building, coach and wheel¬ 
wrights’ work, domestic arts, &c. 
Turners’ work. 
Constructive purposes generally, 
deck deals, masts, &c. 
,, ,, cabinet work. 
z 
