INDEX 



301 



Fur bearers (see also Game)- 



on national forests 



transplanting 



Page 

 199 

 206 



Gallatin National Forest, campground on. 40 

 Game (see also Big Game, Fur Bearers, and 

 species names) — 



and food supply relationships 196 



census of 291 



farms, fish hatcheries, and rearing ponds 



on national forests 204 



habitat, improving future 208 



is food to the Alaskan 231 



on national forests 195 



population trends on western national 



forests 203 



refuges for, in national forests 204 



species found on national forests 197 



surplus of, trapping 206 



the King's 195 



transplanting on national forests 204 



"Geological area" on national forests de- 

 fined 78 



Glover and Cornell estimate of tourist ex- 

 penditures 256 



Goats, mountain, increasing numbers of. . 197 

 Golden Day, by Lewis Mumford, quota- 

 tion from 269 



Gold rushes, effect on migration 216 



Government acquisition of forest land .... 262 



Governors, conference on conservation. . . 180 



Grass-made meat and wool 151 



Graves, John Temple, Birmingham Age- 

 Herald, writes of the land 272 



Grazing (see also Forage, Livestock) — ■ 



and recreation 153 



as a major national-forest use 151 



by livestock coordinated with wildlife . . . 207 



romantic appeal of 1 52 



Great Plains, shade for the people 148 



Grizzly bear in the West 197 



Guests (see also Campers, Tourists, Visit- 

 ors) — 



camper, candid shots of 38 



of the forests 37 



paying, and the spirit of a forest neighbor- 

 hood 253 



paying, communion with hosts 255 



Habitat, improving game 208 



Haida Indians of Alaska 230 



Harding Reservoir, San Diego County, 



California 190 



Hardwoods of the southern Appalachians. 12 



Page 



Hardwood types and selective cutting. ... 147 

 Hatton, John H., quotation from an un- 

 published manuscript 151 



Haskell, Henry J., Kansas City Star, tells 



about conservation 272 



Headley reviews fire record 172 



Hemlock-hardwood stands in Pennsyl- 

 vania 11 



Henry, Patrick, warning of 18 



Herty, Charles H., research of 139 



Highways — 



built for people's use 105 



ugliness and confusion along 96 



Hiking in the forests 79 



Historians and economists, Frederick 

 Jackson Turner, Thorstein Veblen, John 

 Commons, and the Beards, Charles and 



Mary 270 



"Historical area" defined 78 



History of recreation 59 



Homes, summer, limited on national for- 

 ests 287 



Horseback trips 79 



Hosts and paying guests, communion be- 

 tween 255 



Human conservation 273 



Hunters on cut-over lands 138 



Hunting — 



and fishing as sports 196 



camp on the Choctawhatchee 92 



Hurricane in New England, hazards.... 175 



Ill-to-do— 



impediments to recreation by 293 



people and the forest 259 



Income — 



distribution during 1935-36 259 



units, distribution of, in the United 



States 293 



Incomes of national-forest visitors 261 



Independence, the reward of toil 18 



Industry, sustained yield by private 139 



Indians — 



at Twin Buttes tribal grounds 61 



civilization of 60 



first users of forests for recreation 61 



native to Alaska 230 



of the Borinquen race 241 



on the Columbia National Forest 61 



Indian village out from Ketchikan 230 



Interests, conflict of 212 



Isaiah 19, 6-7, from 179 



Ishpeming Ski Club 119 



