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Woodcraft 7 roots, and their solid white interior are easily rememberS. Peel, slice, and fry. Bibliography The following are standard and beautifully illustrated works on mushrooms and toadstools. They have been freely used for guidance and illustrations in the preparation of the above: "Edible Fungi of New York."By Charles H. Peck. Published by New York State Museum, Albany, z9oo. "The Mushroom Book." By Nil? L. Marsth?!l, Published zOoa at New York by Doubleday, Page & Co. $3.5o. "One T?ousand American Fungi." By McI!Ivaine and Macadam. Published by the Bobbs-Merrill Company of Indianapolis, z9oa. $3.oo. Add 4o cents express. "Mushrooms." G.F. Atkinson. Holt & Co. "The Mtmhroom." M. E. Hard. The Ohio Library Co., Columbua,

Ohio. 

COMMON NORTH AMERICAN TREE? White Pine (Pinus strobu.Q A noble evergreen tree, up to x75 feet high. This is the famous pine of New England, the lumberman's prize. Its leaves are in bunches of five, and are 3 to 5 inches long; Hendock Red cedar e. oues 4 to 6 inches long. Wood pale, soft, straight- gra?ed, easily split. Newfoundland to Manitoba and south ? ? Goodie