26 



INDEX. 



tion by Water- Voles, xxi. 105. 

 *F()r(;.st Tramway, xxi. 71. 



**" Moorbaiid Pan," Trees grown on 

 Undrained. A. Gilclirist, vi. 334. 



Moorlands: — Origin and Develop- 

 ment of Heatlier — W. G. .Smith, 

 xvii. 117. ^Planting of High — J. 

 Stirling-Maxwell, xx. 1. 



Moss Land, Planting on. J. Thom- 

 son, i. 120. 



Mossman, R. C. : Forests and Rain- 

 fall, XX. 188. See Reports by Hon. 

 Scientists. 



*Moth, Larch Shoot. 11. S. Mac- 

 Dougall, xxi. 195. 



Mountain Pine, J. Stirling-Maxwell, 

 xxi. 10. 



Munro, D. : Home Timber Trade 

 Outlook, xxiv. 139. 



Murray, A. : *Development of Larch 

 Crop, XX. 8 ; Excursion to Dunkeld, 

 Murthly and Scone (1904), xviii. 

 61 ; Forestry Exhibition at Perth 

 (1904), xviii. 65; Forestry Museum, 

 Murthly Estate, xxii. 237 ; ""'Notes 

 of Silvicultural Interest, xxvii. 206. 



Murray, J. M. : Laying-out of Mixed 

 Plantation and Maintenance for 

 first Twenty-iive Years, xix. 44 ; 

 Nursery Treatment of Western or 

 Californian Hemlock Spruce, xxi. 

 41. 



Murthly Estate : Excursion to (1904), 

 xviii. 61; Forest iluseum — A. 

 Murray, xxii. 237 ; Lecturers at, 

 xxiii. 112 ; Plantations at — D. F. 

 Mackenzie, ix. 82. 



Museums, Estate Forest: — F. B., xx. 

 110 ; Murthly, xxii. 237. 



Myrtle- Wood, Tasmanian, xix. 210. 



Nakcy Professor, Death of a, xxiii. 

 112. 



National Industry of Forestry, 

 Scheme for Establishing, xxi. 135. 

 Criticisms on Scheme — R. Munro 

 Ferguson, xxii. 8. Reply to Criti- 

 cisms, xxii. 13. 



Natural Regeneration : — Of Forests 

 — J. JI'Lean, xi. 36 ; *In General, 

 with Special Details regarding 

 Scots Pine at Heauly — G. Brown, 

 xix. 17. Of Silver Fir— W. Gil- 

 christ, vii. 180. *0f Woods— W. 

 Somerville, xiii. 63. 



Nature as a Forester. W. Brown, 

 vi. 192. 



Nectria on Larch, xvii, 344. 



Neilson, T. : Experiments with Lime 

 and Arseniate of Soda for Protec- 

 tion against Pine Weevil, xix. 207. 



*Nemahis Erichsoni, xx. 96. See 

 Larch Sawfly. 



Newbigin, M. I. : Glencorse Smoke 

 Case, xxii. 221. 



New Brunswick, Wood.s of. L. W. 

 Bailey and E. Jack, xi. 9. 



Newcastle-upon-'lyne. See Exhibi- 

 tions. 



New Forest, Hants, Histoiy of 

 Arboriculture of — G. Lascelles, 

 xiv. 15. 



Newstead, Melrose, Vegetable Re- 

 mains at, xxiii. 31. 



New Zealand, Timber Resources of, 

 x.xiii. 233. 



Nilson, E, : Larch Woods in Scot- 

 land, xvi. 123 ; Recent Develop- 

 ments in Swedish Forestry, xix. 

 136 ; Timber Supjjly from Sweden, 

 XX. 252. 



Nisbet, J. : Afforestation and Timber 

 — Planting in Great Britain and 

 Ireland, xxii. 139 ; A Gigantic 

 Cedar of Lebanon, xix. 212 ; Ash 

 and its Cultivation, xvi. 128 ; 

 British Forestry and its Future 

 Prospects, xvi. 161 . Chief Timber- 

 Trees of India, xix. Ill ; Destruc- 

 tion of Rabbits Injurious to Wood- 

 lands and Fields, xix. 104 ; History 

 of Forestry in Britain (1854-1904), 

 xviii. 20 ; Notes on Continental 

 Forestry (1904), xviii. 161 ; (1905), 

 xix. 161 ; (1906), xx. 64 ; Notes on 

 Indian Forestry (1905), xix. 128 ; 

 (1906), XX. 219 ; Planting Waste 

 Land for Profit, xix. 259 ; Rate of 

 Growth of Mature Timber-Crops in 

 E. Perthshire, xix. 70 ; Reply to 

 Mr Munro Ferguson's Note upon 

 Dr Nisbet's Criticism of Report of 

 Departmental Committee on For- 

 estry, in Preface to The Forester, 

 xix. 200; "The Novar System of 

 Combating Larch Disease." xx. 39 ; 

 "The Railway Fires Act, 1905," 

 xix. 73 ; Training, etc., of Proba- 

 tioners for Indian Forest Service, 

 xix. 107 ; xxi. 191 ; Town-Woods 

 of Carlsbad, Bohemia, xix. 150 ; 

 Utilisation of Existing Woodland 

 Produce, Glen Mor, xxv. 69 ; 

 Working- Plan for British Wood- 

 lands, XX. 30 ; * Working-Plan for 

 Earl of Selborue"s Blackmoor, 

 Bradshott and Temple Woods, 

 Hants, xvi. 193. 



Nitrogen: — In Forest Soils, Ac- 

 cumulation of — A. Lauder, xx. 186. 

 Of Air, Utilisation of — A. Lauder, 

 XX. 183. 



