INDEX. 



To President of Board of Agricul- 

 ture (1894), xiv. 192; (1901), xvi. 

 479; (1912, re Develoj.nient of 

 Forestry in Scotland), >xvi. 202. 

 From Irish Forestry Society to 

 Chief Secretary for Ireland {ro 

 State Atlbrestation), xix. 327. To 

 Secretary for Scotland, xxviii. 

 1. 



Derljv, Forestry Exhibition at Royal 

 Show, 1906, and Some of its 

 Lessons, xx. 91. 



Development Act and Forestry. R. 

 C. ilunro Ferguson, xxiii. HO. 



Development and Koatl Improvement 

 Funds Act (1909), xxiii. 231. 



Development Commission and Fores- 

 try, xxvi. 3 ; xxvii. 1 ; xxvii. 28 ; 

 xxviii. 11. 



Develoi>ment, Forestry : — England 

 and Wales, xxvi. 156 ; xxvii. 147. 

 Scotland : Deputation to Board of 

 Agriculture, xxvi. 202. 



Development Fund Grants: — Ireland, 

 xxiv. 108. Position of Scottish 

 Forestry in Regard to, xxviii. 

 138. Scotland, xxiv. 1, 215. 



Dewar, D. : Extraction of Tree- 

 Si umps. xvi. 321. Obituary— J. 

 Gossip, xvi. 336. 



Dickson, A. : Address, 1882 (Forest 

 Schools), x. 81. 



Diploma iu Forestry at Oxford. F. 

 B., xix. 354. 



Diplosis, XV. 314. 



Disease : — *Conifer, xix. 360. In 

 Beech Hedges — 1!. Hutchison, ix. 

 217. Larch— J. I'.ooth, xvii. 232 ; 

 A. AV. Borthwick, xvii. 37 ; W. 

 M'Corquodale, ii. 43 ; D. F. 

 Mackenzie, viii. 140; F. Story, 

 xvii. 333 ; In Ireland, xxii. 113 : 

 Investigaiion by Engl. Arbor. Soc, 

 xvii. 43; M'lnt^sh's book on, ii. 

 31 ; *Xt\v, on Larch in Scotland — 

 A. W. Borthwick and .Malcolm 

 AVilson, xxvii. 198 ; Novar System 

 of Combating, xi.x. 339 ; Note on 

 Novar Sy.stem, etc — J. Nisl)et, 

 XX. 39 ; *R. Hartig on, xvii. 19 ; 

 Reptrt by Sub-Committee, xviii. 

 213. Of Forest Trees— G. Brown, 

 xvii. 277 ; C. Y. Michie, iv. 51 ; 

 See also viii. 13. On Pinus 

 Laricio and P. sylvestris — H. 

 Maxwell, xx. 117. *Root, in 

 Scots Pine on Farm Lands — B. 

 Ribbentrop, xxi. 143. Spread 

 of Fundus, by Hybernating 

 Mycelium— A. W. B., xx. 122. 

 See Blister, Canker, Dry Rot, 



Failures, and Reporis by Hon. 

 Scientists. 



Diseased Scots Pines on Land 

 formerly Arable, xx. 248. 



Distillation of Wood, xxvi. 99. 



Dochfour. AHorestation at, xxv. 54. 



Dodds, G. : Arboriculture in N. 

 Lancashire, xi. 18S ; Plantations 

 on Estate of Wentworth, Yorks, 

 xii. 156. 



Dorset, Corsican Pine in. J. 

 jrCallum, xxiv. 45. 



Douglas Fir. See Fits. 



Drainage. L. Bayne. vii. 250 ; J. 

 Rutherford, i. 12 ; D. Tait, x. 172. 



Driftwood and Insect .Attacks. A. 

 Mitchell, xiv. 191 ; xv. 197. 



Drought, Resistance of Young Trees 

 to, XX. 247. 



Dry-Rot in Larch and Spruce Fir. 

 J. M'Neill, ii. 7. 



Dry Seasons of 1868, '69 and '70, 

 Ktlects of, on Forest Trees, etc. 

 R. Hutchison, vi. 281. 



Ducie, Earl of: Effects of Geological 

 Position on Certain Conifene, i. 41. 



Duff, J. : Arboriculture in Kent, viii. 

 153 ; Forest Travel in Europe, x. 

 144 ; Old and Remarkable Trees at 

 Bayham Abbey and Wilderness 

 Park, Kent, viii. 147. 



Dumfries, Kirkcudbright and Wig- 

 town, Arboriculture in. A. Pit- 

 caithley, xiii. 293. 



Dumfries. See Exhibitions. 



*Dunes of Gascony, Forest Tour 

 among. F. Bailey, xi. 291. 



Dunkeld, Murthly, and Scone, 

 flxcursion to, 1904, xviii. 61. 



Dunn, M. : Address, 1888, (Origin 

 and Progress of Society ; Report 

 of Foresiiy Committee of House 

 of Commons ; Proposed Forest 

 Board ; Openings for Foresters ; 

 Forest Literature; " Cleghorn 

 Forest Library "), xii. 189 ; Crypto- 

 ganiic Plants Injurious to Forest 

 Trees, viii. 250 ; Forestry in Scot- 

 land in Reign of Queen Victoria, 

 XV. 109 ; Insects Injurioua to 

 Forest Trees, etc., viii. 173. *The 

 Late— W. M Gilbert, xvi. 132. 



Durham, Excursion to, 1906. A. 

 D. Richardson, xx. 81. 



Durris Estate, Douglas Fir on. A. 

 Yeats, xvi. 185. See Excursions. 



Dynamite and Tonite, Use of, in 

 Forestry. D. F. Mackenzie, viii. 

 241. 



Eakdi.ey-Wilmot, S. H. : Indian 



