INDEX. 



635 



Bryant, Arthur, on the aah and the larch, £9 ; ar- 

 ticle by, cited, 106, 505, 509, 510 ; remarks on yel- 

 low Cottonwood, 559. 



Bucbaria, aridity in, 309. 



Buckeye, in North Carolina, 474 ; in Tennessee, 

 483 ; in West Virginia, 492. 



Buckthorn family in Ma.ssachusetts, 415. 



Budd, J. L., on planting of the abh, 75 ; on growing 

 from cuttings, 554; premium planting to be re- 

 ported to, 565. 



Budloug, Mr., on effects of shelter, 274. 



Buffalo, forest products received at, 445 ; Saginaw, 

 shipments to, 517, 518, 519; lumber trade of, 45:2. 



Buffalo Co., Nebr., 583. 



BiiU, Marcus, experiments on charcoal, 129; ex- 

 periments of, on fuel, 136. 



Burger, M., on supply of water to trees, 290. 



Buigsdorf on sowing and planting, 30. 



Buried cedar. New Jersey, 459 ; on coasts of North 

 Carolina, 478; in Nebraska, 580. 



Burlington, Iowa, 544, 548, 549, 568. 



Burlington Co., N. J., 460. 



Burlington and Missouri Eiver Railroad of Ne- 

 braska, tree-planting by, 120, 583. 



Burning of fallows, 103. 



Burt Co., Nebr., 583. 



Bnssey, Benjamin, institution founded by, 206. 



Butternuts, cultivation of, in Illinois. 500 ; heating 

 qualities of, 136; in Iowa, 559; in N. H., 400. 



Buzzard's Bay, tree-planting near, 4-JK 



Byeis, "William N., statements from, 588. 



CactacesB in Massachusetts, 413. 



Cadillac. Mich., 521. 



Calais, Mo., lumber trade of, 397. 



Calaveras grove of " big trees," 604. 



Calculation of profit ot wind-screens, 278 ; of quan- 

 tities of timber made at Saginaw, 517. 



Calcutta, lumber to, from San Francisco, 609. 



Calenberg, former regulations in, 361. 



California, timber of, nnliko that of Atlantic 

 States, 27 ; law in, 200 ; elevation of timber line 

 in, 207; snow in mountains of, 288; timber re- 

 sources of, 597; importance of forest culture in, 

 597; waste, 597; Prof. Whitney's observations 

 on, 599 ; lumber resources of, 603 ; lumber manu- 

 facture in, 607, 608. 



Calm in woods, '-^72. 



Camanche, Iowa, 563. 



Canada, forest fires in, 156; law for preventing 

 forest fires in, 158; lease of timber rightsin, 194; 

 log-maiks registered at a central oliico in, 214 ; 

 droughts on Saint Lawrence, 293; lumber in Al- 

 bany market, 448; timber at Tonawanda, 451, 

 452. 



Canadians, timber business at Saginaw by, 518. 



Canals, supply of water to, 289 ; rules for changing 

 weight to measure, 442, 443 ; New York, business 

 of, in 1874 and 1875, 451. 



Canary Islands, climate of, 303. 



Caneadea, N. T., timber at, 442. 



Canfield, Minn., tree-planting at, 121. 



Canisteo River, lumbering on, 441, 442. 



Canons of western country, 334. 



Capacity for lumber maiiufacture, Saginaw dis- 

 trict, 513; for sawing in certain lumber regions 

 of Northwest in 1877, 549. 



Cape Cod, sand dunes of, 75, 81. 



Capital required for timber culture, 27. 



Capon Iran Works, returns from, 125. 



Carbonic-acid gas in atmosphere, 222 ; formation 

 and use of, 71. 



Car'sberg, records at, 252. 



Carlsraho, polytechnic school at, 620, 621. 



Carpentras, conference at, 347. 



Carpentry and joinery, Massachusetts, 423. 



Carp River, Mich., 524. 



Carriage factories, Massachusetts, 421, 422 ; Mich- 

 igan, 526. 



Carriages, &c., insurable, Massachusetts, 424. 



Carrifere on the durability of tho larch, 60; on 

 transplanting, 86 ; on screens for nurseries, 276. 



Carrol Co., N. H., timber in, 401, 



Carrolton, Mich., 513. 



Carter Co., Ky., 468. 



Carving, turning, &c., 423. 



Cascade Mountains, 598. 



Case, Leonard, tree-planting by, 220. 



Casks for turpentine, 139. 



Cass River, Mich., 512, 522 ; boom, 516. 



Casselton, Dak., tree-planting at, 120. 



Cassville, Wis., 542, 544, 545, 548. 



Catalpa advised for planting in Missouri, 570 ; in 

 Iowa, 560. 



Catawba, timber on, in North Carolina, 470. 



Cato, advice of in planting, 43. 



Cattle benefited by wind-screens, 275; must be 

 kept from young woodlands, 104, 490, 507. 



Cavities froni decayed knots, 89. 



Cayuga Co., N. Y., 453. 



Cedar Co., Iowa, planting in, 554; honey-locust 

 in, 558. 



Cedar Fork, Mich., 543, 545, 546, 550. 



Cedar River, Mich.. 512; Iowa, conifers on, 569; 

 N. Y., lumber on, 438. 



Cedar Springs, Mich., 521. 



Cedar, buried in Nebraska, 580; in New Jersey, 

 459; in North Carolina, 478. 



Cedar, reservations of, 10. 



Cedar, red, heating qualities of, 136; as a screen, 

 276 ; weight of, 442 ; southern, of North Carolina, 

 472; in Kansas, 577 ; of Tennessee, 483 ; of West 

 Virginia, 4E0 ; received at San Francisco, 608. 



Census statistics of forest products, 384 ; forest, 

 Illinois, 511 ; Michigan, 524 ; New York, instruc- 

 tions, 434 ; New York, 1875, 435;'of 1810, in Penn- 

 sylvania, 461. 



C^sanne, M., cited, 337. 



Centennial, Kansas at, 574 ; Michigan forest prod- 

 ucts at, 512 ; tree-planting, Michigan, 512 ; Mis- 

 sissippi proditcts at, 482. 



Center Furnace, returns from, 125. 



Central Illinois, trees adapted to, 504. 



Central America, climate of, 309 ; lumber to, from 

 San Francisco, 609^ 



Central City, Colo., fuel used at, 588. 



Ceylon, climate of, 300. 



Chadbourne, Paul, statements referred to, 596. 



Chair factories, Michigan, 526. 



Chamberlain, Calvin, memorial -of, 207; on change 

 of climate in Maine, 272 ; cited, 395; on effect of 

 clearings, 294. 



Champaign, 111., experiments at, 50.5. 



Champlain Canal, Vermont, timber sent on, 402 ; 

 lumber statistics, 440, 441; forest products on, 443. 



Champlain Ore and Iron Company, returns from, 

 125. 



Change in trees by removal, 87 ; in timber growth, 

 190 ; in forests of Kentucky, 488 ; in forests in 

 Eastern Kentucky, 489. 



Charcoal, 124; composition from various woods, 

 130; red, 132; from different kinds of wood, 130 ; 

 in Massachusetts, 420. 423; for iron manufac- 

 tures. Northern New York, 441. 



Charlevoix Co., Mich., 523. 



Charlotte Furnace, returns from, 12.5. 



Chase, Mrs. E. R., on forest vegetation in Nevada, 

 593. 



Chateaugay River, lumbering on, 441. 



Chazy, lumibering on, 441. 



Cheat River, W. Va., timber on, 493. 



Cheboygan, Mich., 542, 545 ; district, Mich., 523. 



Cheboygan River, Mich., 522. 



Cbeever, Kans., town arboricultural society in. 575. 



Chemical composition of soils, 09 ; works, injury 

 by gases from, 182 ; process in paper-making, 12^ 



Chemung Canal, N. Y., 457. 



Chemung River, timber on, 442. 



Cherokee Chief, big trees of California named 

 from, 6 J3. 



ChoiTy, water required by, 290 ; weight of, 442 ; in 

 Tennessee, 483; black, in Iowa, 559; iu Ken- 

 ucky, 488 ; wild, red, in Iowa, 563; wild, in West 

 Virginia, 492. 



Cheshire Co., N. H., forests of, 401. 



Chestnuts, cultivation of, 508 ; heating qualities of 

 wood, 130; failure of, in North Car. lina, 470; in 

 Iowa, 562; in Massachusetts, 408 ; in New Hamp- 

 shire, 4C0; in North Carolina, 474; in Tennessee, 

 483 ; in West Virginia, 491. 



Chester sands, trees on, 501. 



Chevalier, C. C, on timber-culture act, 23; 



Chevreul, M., experiments of, 317, 331. 



Chicago, Saginaw shipments to, 517. 



Chicago and L?.ko Hurou Railroad, 541, 542, 546. 



Chicago and Michigan Lake Sboio Railroad, 540, 

 542. 



