V 



PAGE 



Business Methods tf> Distril)ute Burden of Forest Restoration (Comments 



on the Sncll Bill) 479 



By H. A. Reynolds. 

 Notes Upon the Paper Industry and the Pulpwood Pupplv 495 



By R. S. Kellogg. 

 A Forestry Enabling Law 500 



By M. S. Howard. 

 The Burning of Dead and Down Trees as a Practical Protection Measure... 505 



By R. B. Weaver. 

 Controlling Insects in Logs by Exposure to Direct Sunlight 512 



By S. A. Graham. 

 The Personal Equation in Brush Disposal 515 



By K. E. Kimball. 

 Choice of Species for Use in Plantations of Pulp and Paper Companies 

 in the North 519 



By H. B. Shepard. 

 Where Forestry and Recreation Meet 526 



By C. J. Stahl and M. W. Thompson. 

 The Pinon-Junipej- Land Problem: 



L Should the Pinon-Juniper Lands Be Included in the National Forests?. 534 



By D, S. Jeffers. 

 II. Plan for Handling the Pinon-Juniper Type 5.37 



By A. F. Hoffman. 



Discussion 541 



Growth and Its Relation to Thinning — Sample Plot Studies in Mixed 

 Hardwoods 546 



By C. H. Guise. 

 Forestry in British India 550 



By T. S. Woolsey, Jr. 

 Present Day Forestry in Austria 558 



By F. S. Baker. 

 Suggestions for a National Arboretum 562 



By W. W. Ashe. 



Annual Meeting of the Society — Announcement 583 



The Jonson Absolute Form Quotient: How It Is Used in Timber Estimating. 584 



By H. R. Wickenden. 

 Fur Culture on the National Forests 594 



By S. Riley. 

 The Calculation of the Mean Fiber-Length of a Tree 607 



By W. B. Stokes. 

 Volume Increment on Cut-Over Pulpwood Lands 611 



By E. F. McCarthy and W. M. Robertson. 

 Indian Timberlands 618 



By J. P. Kinney. 

 Yellow Pine Reproduction : Comments on Factors Affecting Its Establishment. . 622 



By W. J. Perry. 

 A Study of Windfall in the Adirondacks 632 



By C. E. Behre. 

 Some Phases in the Formation of Fire Scars 638 



By H. G. Lachmund. 

 Cooperation in Forest Protection 641 



By R. S. Kellogg. 



