INDEX. 



23 



Lectures, Forestiy : — Infiuenees affect- 

 ing British Forestry- — W. Sonier- 

 ville, xii. 403. Introduction to 

 Course of, at Edin. Univ. (1891-92), 

 F. Bailey, xiii. 174. 



Letter (Scottish Hating Bill, etc.), 

 from President (K. C. Munro Fer- 

 guson) to General Jleeting. 1896, 

 XV. 1. 



Leven, G. : — *Beecli Felt Scale, xx. 

 245 ; *Creosoting Timber, xvii. 

 93 ; Excursion to Border Districts 

 (1911), xxvi. 72 ; Japanese Larch, 

 xxviii. 259 ; Phoma pithf/a, xv. 

 319 ; Trees at Auchincruive, 

 Ayrshire, xix. 212. 



*Lever Appliance. J. Rodger, xvi. 

 189. 



Libraries and Heading - rooms tor 

 Working-men on Landed Estates. 

 R. E. Brown, iii. 13. 



Light in Relation to Tree-Growth — 

 A. W. B., xxvi. 181. 



Light - Intensity, Relatiou of, to 

 Advance Growtli in Oak and Beech 

 Forests. G. P. Gordon, xxvi. 147. 



Light and Shade, EH'ects of, on Trees. 

 J. K., xxvii. 105. 



Ligneous Plants of HaTiipshire. J. 

 Smith, xii. 356. 



Lime, Experiment with, etc., for 

 Protection against Pine Weevil — 

 T. Neilsou, xix. 207. 



Lime - Sulphur, Wash for Foliage, 

 xxiv. 223. 



Lime Trees, Attack of, by Larvse of 

 Winter Moth, xxiv. 107. 



Limited Lialnlity Company to acquire 

 Timber Estate. W. Somerville, 

 xiv. 100. 



Lincoln. See Exhibitions. 



Linlithgowshire, Sitka Spruce, etc., 

 in. H. M. Cadell, xxiii. 158. 



Liparis, xv. 195. 



Literature : — British Forestry, xiv. 

 89. (See also viii. 9 ; x. 180 ; xv. 

 A])p.). Of Scottish Arboriculture 

 — K. Hutchison, vii. 211. i^ul)lica- 

 tion of Indian Departmental, xxi. 

 108. See Book Notices. 



Load of Timber, What is a? xix. 

 216. 



Local Arboricultural Societies. R. 

 Philip, i. 88. 



Local Taxation, Afforestation and 

 K. Mackenzie, xxiii. 3. 



Lochaber, Excursion to (1910). J. 

 Stirling-Maxwell, xxiv. 73. 



Loganbank. Albert Spruce at. F. B. 

 xxi. 109.' 



Loganburn (Gleucorse) Smoke Case. 



A. Lauder, xxii. 15 ; M. I. New- 



bigin, xxii. 221. 

 Lophodermiuni^ xvii. 343. 

 Lophyrus, xx. 96. 

 Lothian, Manjuis of: Address, 1881 



(Application for Royal Charter ; 



School of Forestry ; Progressive 



Change in Climate of Scotland ; 



Vitality of Seeds), x. 75. 

 Lovat Estates, Visit to, by X. Branch 



of H. S. A. S., .\xi. 205. 

 Lovat, Lord: Afforestation, xxii. 156. 

 Lovat, Lord, and Stirling of Keir, 



Capt. : Forest Survey of Glen Mor, 



XXV. 



Lucifer Matches, Manufacture of, in 

 Sweden. J. C. Brown, x. 223. 



M'Beath, D. K. :*"Economic Disposal 

 of Coniferous Timber, xxviii. 251. 



* Thuja Gigantca and Douglas Fir 

 in Mixture, xxviii. 107. 



M'Callum, J. : Corsican Pine in 

 Dorset, xxiv. 45 : *Witch's Broom 

 on Pseudolsuga Doiujlasii, xxviii. 

 116; Tree-growth in 1913, xxviii. 

 118. 



M'Corquodale, W. : Address, 1889, 

 (Origin of Society ; Chairof P'orestry 

 in Edin Unvi. ; Afforestation), 

 xii. 375 ; Conversion of Coppice 

 Land, iv. 47 ; Diseases of Larch 

 [Larix europoea), ii. 43 ; Education 

 of Foresters, ix. 100 ; Has Scotch 

 Fir deteriorated ?ix. 176; Judicious 

 Pruning, x. 166 ; Planting with 

 Scotch Fir after Crops of old Scotch 

 Fir, ii. 48. See xiii. 163. 



Macdonald, D. : Infestation by Pine 

 Weevil, xxiii. 180. 



Jlacdonald, D. M. : Laying-out of 

 Mixed Plantation, and Mainte- 

 nance for tirst twenty-five years, 

 xix. 32. 



Macd(.nald, G. U. : Forest Work, 

 xvi. 451 ; Notes for Planters, xvii. 

 287; Planting Waste Land for 

 Profit, xviii. 183 ; Prices and 

 Supplies in the Timber Trade, 

 xxviii. 270 ; Protection of Young 

 Spruce from Frost, xix. 287 ; 

 Excursion to France (1904), xviii. 

 118; Excursion to Swe<len (1902), 

 xvii. 56 ; Timber Trade Conference, 

 xxiii. 51. See also Plan. 



MacDougall. R. S. : Genus Pissodes, 

 XV. 25 ; *Larch Shoot Moth, xxi. 

 195 ; *Large Larch Saw-fly, xx. 43 ; 



* Meiiastiipmoi spermotrojihua as 

 Enemy of Douglas Fir, xix. 52. 

 See Reports by Hon. Scientists. 



