INDEX 



1675 



Page 

 Sugar pine-ponderosa pine type, measures to 



prevent devastation 1439 



Table. 1452 



Sugar pine, typical stand, California (table) . 927 

 Sulphate pulping process, wood requirements 



(chart), 

 ulphit 



Sulphite pulping process, wood requirements 



(chart) 269 



Summary: 



Of arguments for and against public regu- 

 lation. 1047 



Of expenditures for private forest research. 992 



Historical, of forest taxation legislation 800 



Of progress in State forestry, 1885-191 1 766 



Of report on S.Res. 175 1 



Of results of Federal aid in forest-fire pro- 

 tection 1074 



Of State forestry movement, 1819-85 .. 742 



Summer range on forest land 537 



"Superlative areas" for recreation 471,485 



Supervision required in research 668 



Supply, future timber, Federal acquisition, 



private stumpage. 1284 



Surveys: 



Fishery 524 



Forest and economic, by States 1184 



Forest, national program, proposed.-. 1617 



Land classification 1246 



Sustained yield: 



Essential for permanent communities 110 



Forest products, selective logging 1360 



Possibilities (table) 228,229 



Selective logging research 1378 



Under three management plans. 242 



Sustained -yield management, private: 



New England and Middle Atlantic States. 968 



Pacific coast 911 



Sustained-yield practice, extent on private 



forest lands 896 



Sweden, regulation of private forests 1032 



Switzerland: 



Example of forest management in 906 



Regulation of private forests. 1034 



Wood use 286 



Tanganyika, regulat ion of private forests 1035 



Tanning, raw materials for 555 



Tax delinquency: 



Causes 880 



Idaho (table) 875 



Lake States 876 



Land acquisition through 1250 



Oregon (tables) 873,874 



Other regions and States 879 



Private ownership break-down 870 



Reason some land remains private 883 



Southern States 877 



Washington (table). 875,876 



(See also Abandoned lands, Abandonment.) 



Tax reversion: 



Delinquency, extent 872 



Future trends 887 



Private ownership break -down 871 



Tax-reverted forest land, problems of, sum- 

 mary.... _ 21 



Lake States 835 



State.. ....... 829 



Tax-title lands, present provision for dis- 

 position, examples 885 



Taxation: 



Effect of productive forests on.. 112 



Forest. (See also Legislation, Forest taxa- 

 tion.) 



History of legislation 800 



In State forestry policies. 800 



State regulation 1350 



Telephone lines, Indian forests (table) 626 



Thinning, as an element of intensive forestry. 1456 



Ties. (See Crossties.) 



Tillotson, C. R., author 843,733 



Timber, adequate provision for, summary.. 43 



Annual commodity cut (table)... 214,215 



Annual cut, consumption, and growth 



(table) 1205 



Availability 189 



Summary 24 



Budget, problem of balancing, summary. . 22 



Page 



Timber, Consumption, European, trends. .. 283 



Cut (table) 210,211 



Annual (chart) 13 



Or destroyed annually (table) 206, 208 



Indian lands (table) 613 



Russia 287 



Use, and growth (chart).. 239 



Drain. (See Drain.) (Charts) ...206-211 



Exports, world trends in (tables) 290 



Foreign supplies in relation to markets 240 



Great Britain, imports by (table) 284 



Growing job, public and private (chart) ... 69 



Growth. .. . 220 



Chart 24 



Holdings, small, production forest prod- 

 ucts 1361 



Indian lands, volume 613 



Investment, earnings due to growth (table). 909 



Killed, deterioration of 706 



Disease, insects, etc. (table) 219 



Fire annually (table) 218 



Losses.. 218 



Due to insects 724 



Management, extensive, areas, summary.. 43 



Public domain ._ 640 



Forest Service program, proposal 1620 



Intensive, areas, summary 43 



Plans on national forests 580 



Ownership 184 



Private acreages, Pacific coast 911 



Timber production: 



Areas available for 149 



Areas needed for, summary 43 



In East, balancing grazing with 554 



Forest planting for 1490 



Intensive methods of 1455 



Land available for 125 



Land needed for 1235 



National-forest acquisition for (table) 576 



Public domain 640 



Wild life and 497 



(See also Intensive forestry.) 

 Timber requirements: 



Area needed for (chart) 48-49 



Estimated growth necessary to meet 



(table) 232 



Growing stock needed to meet (table) 233 



Our national 245 



Normal, present and future 84 



Versus supplies.. 235 



Timber resources (chapter heading) 171 



Present and potential 173 



World, decreasing... 295 



Timber, returns, national forests 1323 



Saw. (See Saw timber.) 



Sawed, production by States (table) 1206 



Timber stand of United States 184 



Timber supply, interdependence of States 1205 



Regional interdependence 237 



Timber use on national forests.. 579 



World use in construction 294 



Timberland(s): 



Cut-over, abandonment 881 



Indian reservations 607 



Industrial, area, future 1271 



O. & C. and Coos Bay land grants 647 



Old-growth and second-growth (chart) 128 



Private industrial, factors influencing per- 

 manent ownership 1265 



Uncut, abandonment 882 



(See also Forest land.) 

 Topography: 



Arkansas and Red River drainage 405 



East Gulf drainages 352 



Ohio River basin... 378 



Town forests (table) 843,845 



Training: 



Fire fighting, State organization.. 818 



Personnel, needed in research. 665 



Transpiration, canyon-bottom vegetation, 



California 426 



Transportation, as an element of intensive 



forestry 1464 



Forest products 1358 



Trees, distributed to farmers (table) 1078 



Trends, consumption, meeting the challenge. 1393 



Future, tax reversion, forest land. 887 



Regional, influence on permanent owner- 

 ship of private industrial timberland 1267 



