296 



INDEX 



Page 



Anaconda, the copper town 46 



Apache National Forest 



first tourist on 104 



visitors to 105 



Appalachian Mountain Club 121 



Appalachians, southern hardwoods in the. 12 



Appendix 287 



"Archeological area" on national forests 



defined 78 



Area burned, western national forests 292 



Areas (see also Archeological, Geological, 

 Natural, Scenic, Wild, Wilderness, 

 Virgin, etc.) 



grazed by livestock 1 51, 1 52 



in national forests 289 



of private land on national forests 258 



of special value for recreation 287 



stricken, planning for 138 



Artificial planting, effect on recreational 



use 147 



Association 

 American Automobile, distribution of 



tourist expenditures 257 



National Ski 119 



Associations, local and general, advise in 



national-forest recreation 287 



Attractions of the Choctawhatchce bayou 



country 91 



Audubon Societies, National Association 



of 211 



Authors of Forest Outings v 



Autobiography of Earth, by J. H. Bradley, 



quotation from 241 



"Auto-tourism" and the spirit of demo- 

 cratic unity 255 



Babson estimates tourist business 256 



Bad luck and fires 165 



Basic principles of recreational manage- 

 ment 287 



Battery and Bowling Green date from 



1621 63 



Bear, grizzly, in the West 197 



Beaver, a prime conservationist 195 



Bedding 



out, a common practice 156 



sheep near campgrounds prohibited. ... 155 



Bennett, Hugh, on forest fires 166 



Bibliography 285 



Big game (see also Game) 

 forced from native ranges to national 



forests 202 



increases beyond capacity of ranges. . . 156, 157 



Big game Continued. Page 



lowest ebb in 202 



seeks low-lying winter ranges 156 



species and numbers of, on national 



forests 291 



Bighorn sheep on 55 national forests 197 



Big snow crop, gift or a curse 190 



Biological Survey, wildlife research agency 



of Federal Government 211 



Birds, upland and song, on national forests. 201 



Bismarck Dam, Harncy National Forest, 



South Dakota 1 87 



Black Hills of South Dakota- 

 sustained yield cutting of timber 148 



water in 185 



Blackwater fire, the 1937 159 



Boars, Russian wild, on certain national 



forests 197 



Boston Common bought in 1634 63 



Bourke-White, Margaret, and Caldwell, 



Erskine, You Have Seen Their Faces . . . 273 



Bradley, J. H., Autobiography of Earth, 



quotation from 241 



Buffer strips, roadside 97 



Bureau of Fisheries 



cooperation with 205 



improves fish habitats and population. . 211 



Bureau of Labor Statistics, expenditures by 



families 259 



Burned 



area, western national forests 292 



mountainsides, floodwater and silt run- 

 off 193 



Burning the richness of the land 163 



Business 



benefits from visitors' expenditures 257 



is business, but ugliness is needless 182 



Cabins, high country, for skiers 129 



Caches, first-aid, for winter sports 129 



Caldwell, Erskine, and Bourke-White, 



Margaret, You Have Seen Their Faces . . 273 

 California (see also Yosemite and specific 

 subjects) 



tourist travel in 256 



Yosemite Valley re-ceded to Federal 



Government by 67 



Cameron, Jenks, statement by 280 



Camp 

 and picnic grounds on national forests, 



number of 114 



at Deer Lake, Ocala National Forest .... 266 



by a clear far creek 89 



Dolly Copp, in northern New Hampshire . 95 



