310 



INDEX 



Page 

 Transplanting game animals, fur bearers, 



game birds, and fish 204 



Transportation costs of forest recreation . . . 260 

 Trappers' Lake, White River National 



Forest, Colorado 50 



Trapping surplus game 206 



Tree- 

 growth and water yield, effects of new 



roads on 277 



of Jove, man's first food from 279, 280 



Trees — ■ 



harvesting of old 142 



in long strips, Prairie States Forestry 



Project 281, 282 



to the people 280 



Trips, rigors of wilderness 73 



Tropical plants and trees in Puerto Rico . . 249 

 Trout streams on Apache national forest . . 104 

 Tujunga Canyon, California, fires in the. . 193 

 Type- 

 Douglas fir 145 



lodgepole pine 147 



Typical national forest, timber on 143 



Unforeseen conflicts 215 



United States Department of Agriculture — 



Forest Service, report of the Chief, 1 938 . 159 



steps by, to restore wildlife 8 



Up from Wind River 83 



Upland birds on national forests 201 



Use of national forests, growth in 109 



Uses of forest ranges 151 



Vacations, ways of cutting cost of (see also 



Recreation) 262 



Values that defy price analysis 



Vegetation untouched by livestock 157 



Vesuvius Dam, Wayne National Forest, 



Ohio 187 



"Virgin area" on national forests defined. . 78 



Virgin areas, provision for 287 



Visibility, a subject of Forest Service re- 

 search 278 



Visitors — 



character and habits change rapidly. ... 105 



expenditures, business benefits from. . . . 257 



hunger for natural things 10 



in 1938, on national forests 70 



in national forests, 1924 and 1938, com- 

 pared 109 



in State forests 68 



increase the fire risk 106 



report,Puerto Rican Institute of Tourism . 250 



saddle and pack stock, feed for 155 



Visitors — Continued. Page 



sketches of, on forest recreation 38 



the "peak load" of, in national forests. . . 11 



to southeastern Alaska 273 



to the Apache National Forest 105 



Visits — 



number of, to national forests 89 



recreation, 1909 and 1935 compared 106 



to forest areas in Puerto Rico 250 



Voodoo notions 163 



Wagner, Phillip, Maryland's Sun papers, 



writes of the land 272 



Walker, Capt. Joseph Reddeford 66 



Wallace, Henry A. — ■ 



A Foreword by vn 



New Frontiers 17 



on saving soil and forests 274 



Wain, Nora, Reaching for the Stars 59 



Warming shelters for winter sports 128 



Warnings by Thomas Jefferson and Patrick 



Henry 18 



Wasatch Mountain Club 121 



Wasatch National Forest, recreation 



camps in 262 



Washington on tobacco at Mount Vernon . 1 8 

 Water (see also Floods, Erosion) — 



and forests 179 



a primary product of national forests. . . 181 



for pleasure 184 



in the Black Hills of South Dakota 185 



is the lifeblood of any region 1 90 



is plentiful, on most national forests. ... 185 



problem of providing Ill 



rights, lawsuits over 190 



run-off, guarding against excessive 189 



Water levels — 



and forest pleasure grounds 183 



and wildlife 208 



Water pollution in the United States, re- 

 port by National Resources Board 184 



Watersheds — 



protected, reduce flood damage 138 



that are closed to recreational use 185 



Waterways for camping and swimming. . . 183 

 Waugh, Frank A., recreational survey and 



report 1 08 



Waymack, W. W., Des Moines Register- 

 Tribune, on conservation 272 



Ways and means 253 



Wealth in the raw, endless 17 



Webb, Walter Prescott: Divided We 



Stand, and The Great Plains 273 



Weeks Law, act of 191 1 106 



Weinberger, vacation expenditures, total . . 256 



