34 



INDEX. 



Notes from. J. A. Alexander, xx. 

 194. 



Post Office: — AppointiiKiiits by — • 

 F. B., XX. 113. Supply of Tele- 

 graph Poles to — F. Bailey, xix. 

 :U3. 



Powerscourt, Couiferie at — C. S. 

 France, v. 83. 



Preparation : — Of Ground for Plant- 

 ing— J. Darling, i. 96. Of Waste 

 Land for Planting — K. Philip, ii. 

 21. 



Presentation to DrCleghorn, xii. 198. 



Preservative : — Against Wood-Splitt- 

 ing, xxiv. 110. Timber, Experi- 

 ments on Relative Value of, xxi. 

 201. 



Preserving : — Sleepers from Decay, 

 xxiii. 234. Wnod by Electrolysis, 

 XX. 128. See Timber, and Creosot- 

 ing. 



Prestonfield, Edinburgh. See Ex- 

 hibitions. 



Primitive Woodland and Plantation 

 Types in Scotland. G. P. Gordon, 

 xxiv. 153. 



Private Forestry, Encouragement of. 

 A. Schwappach, xx. 212. 



Probationers for Indian Forest 

 Service, xix. 107 : xxi. 191 ; xxiv. 

 212. 



Produce, Forest : — ^Disposing of — A. 

 Peebles, vii. 159. Preparation of, 

 for Sale — AY. Thomson, vi. 

 275. 



Pruning: — Different Methods of — A. 

 Gilchrist, vii. 40. Forest Trees — 

 C. Y. Michie, v. 34 : R. Philip, i. 

 20 ; ii. 11. In Relation to Pro- 

 duction of Timber — J. B. Smyth, 

 viii. 54. "Its Ornament and 

 Utility— A. T. Gillanders, xi. 49. 

 Judicious — W. M'Corquodale, x. 

 166. Rarer Coniferfe — R. Hutchi- 

 son, iv. 170. "Trees in St James"s 

 Park and Piccadilly, London — 

 I. B. Balfour, xxvi. 31. 



Prussia: — ^Investigations in Regard 

 to Quality of Timber — W. Somer- 

 ville, XV. 279. State Forests of — 

 W. Somerville, xiv. 140. 

 Pscudotsuga : — List of Species, viii. 

 108. Uouglasii, Rate of Growth 

 of, in Woods of Saxony — communi- 

 cated by J. Booth, xx. 104. 

 "Witch's Broom on — J. M'Callum, 

 xxviii. 116. See Douglas Fir. 

 Pulp Industry of Canada, xxiii. 108. 



See Wood-Pulp. 

 Pyrenees, Basses, Forests of. G. 

 Cadell, xvii. 104. 



Rabbits: — xxiv. 109. Injurious to 



Woodlands and Fields, Destruction 



of — J. Nisbet, xix. 104. See xx. 



140. 



Raffan, A. : Larch SawHy, xxvi. 220. 



Kafn, .1. : Tree Seed-Testing, xvi. 

 277, 407. 



Railway and Canal Traffic Act, 1888. 

 A. T. Williamson, xii. 42.^. 



Railway Fires Act, 1905. J. Nisbet, 

 .xi.x. 73 ; F. B., xxii. 111. 



Railway Rates on Timber, xvii. 318 ; 

 H. Galloway, xxvi. 96. 



Railway Sleepers : — From Home- 

 Grown and Foreign Timber, xxvii. 

 188. From Irish-Grown Timber, 

 xviii. 225. Impregnation of, with 

 Chloride of Barium, xvii. 340. 

 Preserving from Decay, xxiii. 234. 



^Railways, Woods and. W. Biown, 

 vi. 192. 



Rainfall:— At Inverliever (1910), 

 xxiv. 220. Forests and — R. C. 

 Mossman, xx. 188. In Wooded 

 and Unwooded Countries — R. 

 Hutchison, vii. 10. See vii. 114, 

 285. See also Climate, and Re- 

 ports by Hon. Scientists. 



Raismes, Valenciennes, Forest of. 

 Prof. Fisher, xviii. 109. 



Raith : — And Novar Working-Plans 

 — R. C. Munro Ferguson, xvi. 96. 

 "Practical Course in Forestry at 

 (1910), xxiv. 208. '-Working-Plan 

 for Pit-wood Working Circle — F. 

 Bailey and G. U. Macdonald, xv. 

 223. 



Ramsden, Sir John, Bart., Obituary, 

 xxviii. 272. 



Rannoch Black Wood, Survivor of. 

 F. B. , xvi. 320. 



Rate of Growth : — Of Mature Timber- 

 Crops in E. Perthshire — J. Nisbet, 

 xix. 70. Of Pseudotsuga Douglasii 

 in Woods of Saxony, xx. 104. 



Rating Act (1874), xxiii. 137. 



Rating of Woodlands. R. Galloway, 

 xxvi. 96. 



Raynham, Norfolk, Plantations on 

 Estate of. A. Gorrie, xiii. 331. 



Reading - I'ooms and Libraries for 

 Working-men on Landed Estates. 

 R. E. Brown, iii. 13. 



Re-afTorestation : — In Ireland, xxi. 

 107. See Afforestation, and Notes 

 and Queries. 



Ke-att'oresting Association, Midland. 

 A. D. R., XX. 107. 



Reclaimed Lands, Afforestation of, 

 xxi. 229. 



Reclamation of Neglected Planta- 



