Vlll 



CONTEXTS 



Page 

 Presidency of the American Forestrj' 



Association 555 



President Taft Makes Changes in Na- 

 tional Forests 491 



Prevention of Forest Fires in Minne- 

 sotaGen. C. C. Andrews 48 



Principles of Handling Woodlands, the 



(review) Henry S. Graves 365 



Principles of Scientific Management 



(review) Frederick W. Taylor. 629 



Products, Canadian Forest 503 



Professor Glenn's Report 170 



Professorship of Lumbering, Yale's new 620 

 Progress of Forestry in Wisconsin 



Frank B. Moody 595 



Protection in the National Forests, fire 



Earle H. Clapp 573, 652 



Protection of Forests from fire, the H. 



S. Graves 41 



Protective Associations, Timberland E. 



A. Sterling 667 



Pruning of White Pine, the F. B. 



Knapp 204 



Public Aspects of Forestry H. S. 



Graves 525 



Publications of the United States Geo- 

 logical Survey 249 



Pulp and Timber, Planting for 298 



Purple Basket Willow C. D. Mell 2S0 



Railroads Waking Up, New England 313 

 Railways and Forest Protection R. H. 



Aishton 38 



Railway's Forest Enterprise, a FiHbert 



Roth 395 



Ranger Course at Colorado School of 



Forestry 691 



Ranger, Fall Work for the 498 



Ranger, the Forest E. R. Jackson 445 



Ranger, the Strenuous Life of the 463 



Recent Publications See Current Litera- 

 ture. 



Reforestation, Commercial 747 



Reforestation in Massachusetts F. AV. 



Rane 160 



Reforestation on the Pike National For- 

 est C. W. Fitzgerald . 646 



Reforestation, Studies for A. G. Hamel 706 

 Reforestation, the Pennsylvania Railroad 



and 505 



Reforesting Burns in California National 



Forests 467 



Reforesting in the National Forests 



(pictures) 263 



Relief for Homesteaders 685 



Report by Professor Glenn 170 



Page 

 Report of the Forester for 1912 125 



Report of Thirtieth Annual Meeting 99 



Report on Standing Timber, Commis- 

 sioner Smith's 182 



Report on the Lumber Industry 227 



Reports and Bulletins See Current 



Literature. 

 Reproduction of Engelmann Spruce 



After Fire L. J. Young 396 



Resignation of District Forester Chap- 

 man 177 



Resolutions Adopted at Thirtieth An- 

 nual Meeting, American Forestry 



Association 115 



Reviews, Book 54, 



55, 172, 230, 231, 365, 366, 429, 629, 

 686, 687, 688. 

 Rivers and Harbors, the Pollution of__ 484 

 San Bernardino Fire, an official Ac- 

 count of the 625 



Saw Mill, Uncle Sam's One 570 



School in the Philippines, a Forest 



W. F. Sherfesee 517 



School, the Place of Forestry in the 



Don Carlos ElHs 509 



Schools, List of Forest i^'.^ 566^ 



Scientific Management and the Lum'be'r 



Industry R. C. Bryant 724 



Secretaryship of the Interior, the 228 



Seed Collecting on the Kaibab 943 



Seed Eating Animals on the Tahoe 497 



Shade Tree, the Water Oak as a C. D. 



Mell 663 



Shade Trees in Towns and Cities (re- 

 view) William Solotaroff 429 



Shall States Regulate the Management 

 of Private Forest H. H. Chap- 

 man 82 



Sihlwald, the Barrington Moore 531 



Silence Broken, a 682 



Small Forest Reserve for Illinois, a 313 



Some New Ideas in Controlling Forest 



Fires Samuel J. Record 197 



Some Things a Forest Ranger Should 



Know C. H. Shattuck 224 



Sopris National Forest, Disposal of Fire 

 Killed Timber on the John Mc- 

 Laren 731 



Southern Appalachian Rivers, the 246 



Southern Appalachians, a fire Protection 



Plan in the W. H. Weber 637 



Southern Pine Beetle, the 633 



vSpruce yXftcr Fire, Reproduction of 



Engelmann L- J. Young 396 



