INDEX. 



Systematic Destruction of — A. 

 Fraser. xx. 119. See xv. 68. 



State: — .And Afforestation, xxv. 83. 

 And Private Woodlands — W. 

 Dawson, xxiv. 121. Duty of, as 

 regards Affore.station, xxiii. 1. In 

 Relation to Afforestation — A. S. 

 Hedderwick, xxiv. 150. In Rela- 

 tion to Forestry — "\V. Schlich, xxii. 

 130. 



State Afforestation : — Deputation to 

 Chief Secretary for Ireland, xix. 

 327. In Scotland — F. Bailev, xxi. 

 27. 



State Forestry, Indian. S. H. 

 Eardley-Wilinot. xxiii. 217. 



State Forests : — Inverliever — 11. C. 

 Munro Ferguson, xxi. 22. Model, 

 forScotland,xv. 201,221. *Saxony 

 — A. D. Hopkinson, xxvii. 174 ; 

 xxviii. 28. 



State School of Forestry in Forest of 

 Dean. xxiv. 217. 



Steam Power, Use of, in Forestry. 

 D. F. Mackenzie, vii. 269. 



Stebbing, E. P. : Collection and Pre- 

 servation of Entomological Speci- 

 mens, etc., xvii. 135 ; Forestry 

 Education : Its Importance and 

 Requirement-, xxiv. 24. 



Stewart, D. : Abies nobilis fur Plant- 

 ing \\\) Blanks in Old and in Young 

 Woods, xxiii. 103 : Effects of Frost 

 on Plants of Larix europcea, and 

 L. leplolepis compared, xxiii. 103. 



Stewart, W. JIaitland : Advantages 

 of Growing Pit-wood Timber, xix. 

 282. 



Stirling. See Exhibitions. 



Stirling-Maxwell, Sir J. : *Belgian 

 System of Planting on Turfs, xxiii. 

 153 ; Excursion to Lochaber (1910), 

 xxiv. 73 ; Immediate Needs of 

 Forestry in Scotland, xxiii. 121 ; 

 Landowners' Forestry Co-operative 

 Society, xxiv. 104, xxviii. 231 ; 

 Place of Forestry in the Economic 

 Development of Scotland, xxvii. 

 161 : *Phinting of High Moorlands, 

 XX. 1 : Report of Royal Commission 

 on Afforestation, xxii. 186 : *The 

 Mountain Pine, xxi. 10. 



Stirling of Keir, Capt. : Letter to 

 Board of Agriculture, xxvii. 143. 



Stirling of Keir, Capt, and Lovat, 

 Lord: Forest Survey of Glen Mor, 

 xxv. 



Stirlingshire, Sitka Spruce, etc., in. 

 H. M. Cadell, xxiii. 158. 



Stocking of Ground, Glen Mor, xxv. 

 53. 



Storie, W. : Decline in Value of 

 Coppice Woods, xix. 203 : Prices 

 of Timber in South of England 

 (1904-05), xix. 204 : Profits from 

 Timber -Growing in Hampshire, 

 xix. 205. 



Storv, F. : Excursion to Sweden 

 (1902), xvii. 68 ; Experimental 

 Forestrj' Area in Wales, xxvii. 

 19 ; German Forestry, xviii. 

 138 ; Japanese Larch and Larch 

 Disp'se, xvii. 333 : h. E. A. 

 Society's Tour in Denmark (1908), 

 xxii. 56 : *Seed Experiments with 

 Pinna siilvestris. xxiii. 168 ; The 

 Ziirich Woods, xxii. 34 ; * Visit 

 to German Forests, xvi. 424 ; 

 Working - Plan (1905 - 1919) of 

 Castle Hill Woodlands, xx. 36. 



*Straining Pillars for Wire Fences. 

 J. Kay, X. 32 : C. Y. Michie. v. 75. 



Strophosonms Coryli, Attack by. J. 

 Slacrae, xxiii. 185. 



Stumps, Tree, Extraction of, xvi. 

 320. 



Sulphur, Effects of, on Iron Fencing. 

 T. Wilkie, viii. 165. 



Surplus Lands, Afforestation of. W. 

 Schlich, .xxi. 225. 



Survev, Botanical, of Scotland. 

 A. W. B., XX. 122. 



Sussex : — Forestry in — D. A. Glen, 

 xvi. 414. Self-Sown Oak Woods 

 of— R. W. Glutton, vii. 194. 



Sweden : — Anticipated Curt;iilnient 

 of Timber Supplies from — F. Bailej', 

 xix. 337. Finspong Foresr, x\ii. 

 339. Manufactureof Matches in — 

 J. C. Brown, x. 223. New Forestry 

 Laws, xviii. 227. Timber-Sui)ply 

 from — E. Nilson, xx. 252. See 

 Excursions. 



Swedish Forestry, Some Becent De- 

 velopments in. E. Nilson, xix. 

 136. 



Swiss Forests, Recent Publications on. 

 W. G. Smith, xxvii. 202. 



Switzerland : — And Germany, Visit 

 to (1905)— J. J. R. Meiklejohn, 

 xix. 303. Co-operative Agri- 

 cultural Credit in, xvii. 331. 

 Forest Administration in Canton 

 Vaud— G. Cadell, xii. 78. See 

 Excursions. 



Sylvicultural Experiments at Novar. 

 1!. C. Munro Ferguson, xx. 98. 



Sylvicultural Notes: F. Hall, xxi. 

 "176; *xxii. 67: W. Hall, xxii. 

 104. 



Sylviculture : — Estate — Conducted 

 Experiments in, etc. — F. B., xx 



