INDEX— Topics 



•409 



VOL. I, NO. 1. Page. 



Arboriculture 5 



Letter from Vice-President Bowditch 7 



The Catalpa Speciosa as a Railway Timber 



Tree 9 



To Form a Catalpa Plantation 11 



Mining Timber 11 



The Quail 13 



A War Upon Goats 15 



The Abele for Wood Pulp 15 



Correspondence and Inciuiries 17 



The Celebrated 13achelder Pine 19 



liook Reviews 20 



Narcissus or Daffodil 21 



VOL. I, NO. 2. 



Trees for City Streets 27 



Southern Cypress 30 



Tree Planting in Cities 32 



Removal of Large Trees 34 



California's Wonderful Trees 35 



Tree Culture Briefs 36 



Some Good Trees for Colorado Springs 38 



Book Reviews 43 



VOL. I, NO. 3. 



Appeal to American Farmers 47 



Erosion 49 



Legislation Demanded 51 



Christmas Trees a Growing Evil 56 



Ginkgo Biloba, or Maidenhair Tree 58 



Oil the Ally of Arboriculture 59 



Preserving Forests by Fire 60 



Inquiries and Correspondence 62 



Rocky Mountain Conditions 64 



VOL. I, NO. 4. 



Improvement of New England Forests 69 



The Eucalyptus 75 



Profitable Character of Catalpa (Speciosa).. 79 



Evidences of Climatic Changes 82 



Forest Fires and Legislation 87 



VOL. II, NO. 1. 



The Hardy American Forest Tree 97 



To Railway Directors and Ofiicers 98 



Management of Catalpa Plantation 103 



Where the Catalpa Grows 114 



Stop! Look! Listen! 120 



Theory Based Upon Error 125 



In the Catalpa Slashes 126 



Decay of the Catalpa 126 



Letter from Vice-President Bowditch 130 



California Tule Lands for Catalpa 134 



VOL. II, NO. 2. 



Forest Needs of Indiana 141 



Forestry Law of Indiana 142 



A Canadian's Opinion 143 



Attica's Wasted Forests 143 



The Eucalyptus for the South 145 



The Black Walnut 149 



The Aspen 150 



Wood Preservation 152 



Petrified Forests of America 154 



Hypodermics for Trees 156 



The Wild Black Cherry 158 



VOL. II, NO. 3. 



Disastrous River Floods 163 



Facts About Telegraph Poles 169 



Charcoal Pits 170 



Memorial to Congress 171 



Pinus Ponderosa 173 



Forest Nursery Company 177 



The Lombardy Poplar 178 



Indiana Forests 179 



Forests of the Rocky Mountains 181 



VOL. II. NO. 4. 



The Sequoia Sempervirens 185 



The Colorado Forestry Association 192 



Forest Fish and Game Commission 194 



About, Over and Under Pike's Peak 200 



Sheep Enemies of Forest 203 



The Sage Brush of the Plains 205 



Nebraska's Need of Trees 206 



Recent Railway Tree Plantings 207 



Reviews 209 



VOL. II, NO. 5. Page. 



The Control of Wind by Forests 215 



Yucca for Planting on Sand Dunes 221 



The Cottonwood 223 



Dwarf Oak of the Rocky Mountains 225 



The Yosemite Valley 227 



The Pinon, or Nut Pin 231 



The l^lack Locust 232 



Editorial Notices 235 



Trees on Boston Common 236 



VOL. II, NO. 6 



Phenomenal Meteorological Conditions 243 



Floods, Bridges and Dams 245 



Yellow Pine for the West 247 



The Cement Pavement Craze 249 



The Gray Birch of New England 251 



The Red Cedar for Snow Guards 253 



The Arapahoe Glaciers, Colorado 254 



Why We Have Cloudbursts 255 



Forests and Floods 255 



It Is Worth Considering 256 



Spruce Trees Planted by Birds 258 



Forest Reserves 258 



Forest Fires— What Remedy? 260 



Wood as a Crop 262 



The Expedition of Lewis and Clark 264 



VOL. II, NO. 7. 



Under Mexican Skies 279 



Forests of Mexico 280 



Architecture 285 



The Eucalyptus in Mexico 286 



Arboriculture in the Republic 288 



Floating Gardens 291 



Volcano Colema 291 



Irrigation 292 



Temperature 292 



Forestry Law 292 



Agricultural Experiment Station 295 



Pyramids of Cholulij 295 



Down on the Wabash 299 



Editorial Notes 301 



Among Books 302 



VOL. II, NO. 8. 



Mexico's Volcanoes 341 



The Honey Locust J.j.iju,(^aj»v- 



Water Supply of an Inland City .\ .35 



Our Duty at Panama iS.l;*.V..V|HJK. 



Indiana State Fair *» 346 



The Mexican Central Railway (ii < .1 /*.« I^\ L 



Forests and Floods r— %•!»•• 350 



The Philippines M.'AK^. 250 



Rejjlace the Forests 351 



Arboriculture in New Zealand 352 



Minor Industries of Mexico 352 



Forest Fires 353 



Set-back for Scientific Forestry 354 



Plant Trees 356 



California Caring for Her Timber 356 



Government Protection of Forests 362 



VOL. II, NO. 9. 



How to Distinguish Catalpa Speciosa 375 



Railway Crossties 37'7 



New Evidences of Durability 380 



Prairie Kansas a Forest Center 383 



Pennsylvania Railway's Experiment 386 



Progress at the World's Fair 388 



Book Reviews 391 



VOL. II. NO. 10. 



Index 409 



B. E. Barney, Memoir 412 



Timberman's Problems 414 



Letter from Geo. W. Tincher 418 



Biltmore Forestry School 419 



Excellent Tree Growth 421 



Topeka Catalpas 422 



Railway Accidents 422 



Oliver Chanute 423 



Ohio Experiment Station 425 



"Where our Forests are Going 426 



The Cornell Forestry School 428 



Pennsylvania Letter and Reply 430 



Somebody's Hurt 431 



^Vorld's Fair Progress 434 



Book Reviews 436 



