INDEX. 



Hobart - Hanii)dcii, A. (i. : Con- 

 tinental Notes — France, xxi. 73 ; 

 xxii. 46 ; xxiii. 57 ; xxiv. 56 ; 

 xxvi. 48 ; xxvii. 41 ; xxviii. 60. 



Hogg, T. : Cutting Tinil)er by Axe 

 or Saw, vi. 227 ; Old and Remark- 

 able Trees at Hampton Court, ix. 

 145. 



Holkliani, Norfolk, Planting of Sand- 

 hills at. A. Gorrie, xiii. 350. 



Holland, etc., Atforestation of Waste 

 Lands, xxii. 207. 



HoineGrown Timber, Manufacture 

 of — A. T. Williamson, xiii. 151. 



Home Nurseries, Expediency of 

 Establishing. J. G. Thomson, iv. 

 15. 



Home Timber Trade Outlook. D. 

 Mu!iro, xxiv. 139. 



Hopkinson, A. D. : *State Forests of 

 Saxony, xxvii. 174 ; *xxviii. 28. 



"Houston Pinetum. W. Tivendale, 

 vii. 38. 



Humus as Geographical Agency. M. 

 Hardy, xvii. 256. 



Hungarian Ash, xix. 209. 



Hungary, Forestry in. F. Bailev, 

 xii. 1. 



Hutchison, R. : Address, 1867, 

 (Growth and Prospects of Society), 

 iv. 167; Address, 1868, (Meeting 

 of Brit. Assoc, at Norwicli ; Need 

 for Scientific Investigation and 

 Accurate Observation in Forestry), 

 V. 3 ; Address, 1869, (Importance 

 of Arboriculture as a Science ; In- 

 fluence of Woods on Climate), v. 

 99; Address, 1870, (Importance of 

 Careful and Accurate Observation ; 

 Formation of Field-Clubs ; Local 

 Museums), vi. 1 ; Address, 1871, 

 (Advantages of belonging to 

 Society ; Importance of Cultivating 

 Moral and Spiritual Faculties ; 

 Theories of Creation ; Circulation 

 of Sap in Trees), vi. 239 ; Address, 

 1880, (Progress of Arboriculture at 

 Home and Abroad ; Flow of Sap in 

 Trees), ix. 191 ; *Altitude and Ap- 

 pearance of Wellingtonia gigantca, 

 vii. 190 ; Beetles, etc., which 

 infest Coniferte, vii. 123 ; Cedar 

 of Lebanon, etc., xiii. 200 ; Coni- 

 fene and Evergreens introduced 

 fi'om Japan, v. 6. Conservation 

 of Old and Remarkable Trees in 

 Britain, vii. 259 ; Corsican, 

 Austrian and Douglas Firs as 

 Timber Trees, vii. 52 ; Disease in 

 Beech Hedges, ix. 217 ; Economic 

 Uses, etc., of Timber Grown in 



Scotland, v. 109; Effects of Dry 

 Seasons of 1868, '69 and '70 on 

 Trees and Shrub.s, vi. 281 ; Intro- 

 duction and Cultivation of Newer 

 Coniferfc, etc., iii. 44 ; Literature 

 of Scottish Arboriculture, vii. 211 ; 

 *01d and Remarkable Yew Trees in 

 Scotland, xii. 379 ; Progress of 

 Forestry in Scotland, ix. 1 ; Prun- 

 ing Rarer Conil'erie, iv. 170 ; Rain- 

 fall in Wooded and Unwooded 

 Countries, vii. 10 ; Rearing and 

 Maintaining Live Fences, etc., iii. 

 15 ; Rise and Fall in Value of 

 Timber grown in Scotland, etc., 

 vi. 138 ; Timber Trees Suitable to 

 different Soils, etc., in Scotland, 

 iv. 31 ; Transplanting Pines and 

 Evergreen Shrubs, iv. 3 ; Trees for 

 Shelter in Islands of Scotland, ix. 

 140. 



Hutton, J. : Planting Sandhills, viii. 

 19 ; Woods and Plantations of 

 Mackintosh Estate, Brae Lochaber, 

 viii. 233. 



Hyalopus, xix. 195. 



Hybernating Mycelium, Spread of 

 Fungus Diseases by. A. W. B., 

 XX. 122. 



HyJesinvs, xv. 65, 193 ; xvi. 152 ; 

 xvii. 345. 



HyJobius, xvi. 154 ; xxiii. 180. See 

 Weevil. 



" Ice Age, from the, to the Present." 

 A. W. Borthwick, xx. 253 



Imported Coniferous Timbers, Our. 

 A. D. Richardson, xvii. 238. 



Imports : — Timber into United King- 

 dom (1903-04), xviii. 238 ; (1905), 

 xix. 218. Timber and other 

 Classes of Woods (1909-10), xxiv. 

 219. 



Impregnation : — Of Railway Sleepers 

 with Chloride of Barium, xvii. 340. 

 Of Timber— D. M'Laren, xvi. 525. 



Inchnacardoch, Glendoe, and Dell, 

 Afforestation at, xxv. 56. 



Increment, Annual, of Spruce and 

 Scots Pine. J. H. Milne-Home, 

 xxiv. 52 ; xxvi. 160 ; xxvii. 34. 



India : — Chief Timber-Trees of — J. 

 Nisbet, xix. 111. Distribution ot 

 Forests— D. Brandis, vii. 88. Dis- 

 tribution of Timber Trees, and 

 Forest Conservancy — H. Cleghorn, 

 V. 91. Lecture on Forests of — Sir 

 R. Temple, x. 1. Progress in, in 

 Preparation of Working - Plans, 

 xxvi. 98. Progress of Forestry in 

 — D. Brandis, x. 247. Report on 



