[The School Book of Forestry by Charles Lathrop Pack]@TWC D-Link book
The School Book of Forestry

CHAPTER V
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The hickory wood is exceedingly strong and tough and is used wherever stout material is needed.

For the spokes, wheels and bodies of buggies and wagons, for agricultural implements, for automobile wheels and for handles, hickory is unexcelled.

The shafts of golf clubs as well as some types of base-ball bats are made of hickory.

Most hickory trees are easy to identify on account of their shaggy bark.

The nuts of the hickory, which ripen in the autumn, are sweet, delicious and much in demand.
Our native elm tree is stately, reaching a height of 100 feet and a diameter of 5 to 6 feet or more.


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