INDEX. 



Co-opeiiitive Tiiiilier-Growiiig, Pro- 

 titable. K. Galloway, xix. '291. 



Coppice : — Con version of Scoied, into 

 Higliwood, etc.--H. J. Maisiiali, 

 xix. 99. Management of Oak, etc. 

 -.1 M'Leod, i. 10-3 ; J. Whyte, i. 

 215 ; T. Wilkie, ix. 270. 



Coppice- Bark, Curing of, etc. J. 

 M'Leod, i. 103. 



Coppice Land, Conversion of. W. 

 M'Corquodale, iv. 47. 



Coppice- Woods, Decline in Value of. 

 W. Storie, xix. 203. 



Corsican Fir. Se(^ Firs. 



Cursican Pine. See Pine. 



*Cottage, Forester's. R. B. Keay, 

 xii. 288 ; \V. Macintosh, xi. 364 ; 

 A. Pitcaithley, xi. 506. 



Coupar, K. : *l)lister in Larch 

 Plantations, x. 119. 



Coverts. See Game. 



Cowley -Brown, F. L. C. : Demon- 

 stration Forests for Scotland, xxii. 

 20 ; Visit to French Private Forest, 

 xxvi. 172. 



Craig, J. : *Boring - Machine, iii. 

 101 ; Conifene and Hardwoods 

 best adapted to resist Attacks of 

 Hares and Rabbits, vi. 233 ; Is 

 Grease injurious to Trees ? vi. 

 236. 



Credit, Agricultural, Co-opetaiive, in 

 Germany and Switzerland, xvii. 

 331. 



Creosote for Timber - Preserving, 

 Water in, xix. 211. 



Creosote Oil, Use of, in United 

 States. W. B. Havelock, xx. 256. 



Creosoted Timber, xx. 128. 



Creo.-oting : — Notes on — A. T. Gill- 

 anders, xxiii. 172. Of Home- 

 Grown Timber — \V. B. Havelock, 

 XX. 58. Timber — G. Leven, xvii. 

 93. Timber by Absorption — J. 

 Balden, xx. 62. Tree Stumps 

 against Pine Weevil — F. R. S. 

 Balfour, xxviii. 270. See Notes 

 and Queries. 



Crossbills, Damage by. J. J. R. 

 Meiklejohn, xvi. 318. 



Crosier, J. 1). : ''Douglas Fir as 

 Commercial Timber Tree, xxi. 31 ; 

 *Sitka Spruce as Tree for Hill- 

 Planting and General Attbrestation, 

 xxiii. 7. 



* Cryptococcus, xx. 245. 



Cryptogamic Plants Injurious to 

 Fori'st Trees. M. Dunn, viii. 250. 

 Onjptumyces, xviii. 212. 

 Cullachy, Afforestation at, xxv. 57. 

 Cultivation : — Of Hardwoods — J. 



Boyd, xxi. 44, 150. Of Willows, 



xxiii. 191. 

 Cupar. See Exhibitions. 

 Cutting Timber by Axe or Saw, 



Comparative Advantages of. T. 



Hogg, vi. 227 ; J. Milne, vi. 224. 



Dama(;k to Woods, etc. : — liv Pine 

 Weevil— E. S. Grant, xx. 53. By 

 Shale Industry, xvi. 470. By 

 S2)arks from Railway Engines — 

 F. Bailey, xvi. 289, 524. See 

 Notes and Queries. See also xxii. 

 15, 221. 



Darling, J. : Preparation of Ground 

 for Planting, i. 96 ; Thinning 

 Plantations, i. 210. 



Davidson, J. : Profitableness of Rear- 

 ing Underwood, iv. 21. 



Dawson, W. : Excursion to Deeside 

 (1913), xxvii. 67 ; The State and 

 Private Woodlands, xxiv. 121 ; 

 Working- Plan, Glen ilor, xxv. 60. 



Dean, Forest of. See Forest of Dean. 



Death Dutifs : — And Timber-Plant- 

 ing— D. F. Mackenzie, xvi. 321. 

 As affecting Woodlands, Note on — 

 R. Galloway, xxiii. 133. On 

 Woods — R. Galloway, xxvii. 36. 



Deciduous 'frees, for Landscape 

 Forestry. J. Jlethven, xii. 94. 



Deer Forests : — Glen Mor, xxv. 15. 

 Planting of — D. F. Mackenzie, 

 ix. 53 ; and Sporting Lands in 

 Scotland, xxvii. 237. 



*Deeside ; Excursion to (1913). W. 

 Dawson, xxvii. 67. 



"Demonstration Forest. Some Uses 

 of. J. F. Annand, xxvii. 54. 



Demonstration Forests for Scotland, 

 F. L. C. Cowley-Brown, xxii. 20. 

 See also xx. 113. 



Denbiglishire : — Experimental Sta- 

 tion — F. B. , XX. 254. Scheme for 

 Experimental Station — -A. D. R., 

 XX. 108. 



Dendrometer, Mackenzie's, x. 241. 



Denmark : — Afforestation of Waste 

 Lands in, xxii. 207. *Oak and 

 Beech Forests in — W. G. Smith, 

 xxviii. 241. Tour of R. E. A. Soc. 

 in, 1908— F. Story, xxii. 56. 



Department of Woods, Appointments 

 b}-, xxi. 110. 



Departmental Committee on Forestry. 

 See Committee. 



Deputations : — To Chancellor of 

 Exchequer (1906)— W. Steuart 

 Fothringham, xix. 323. To Chan- 

 cellor of Exchequer (1909, re 

 National Atiorestation), xxii. 200. 



