Wilson at Suspension Bridge on Forest Pack Trail 



turned down some nice offers and 

 then excused himself by saying: "Isn't 

 this too good a layout to drop?" 



Larsen, '10, is at San Francisco in 

 the District Office, and says he likes 

 the forest and the brush, but hates 

 the office work. 



Maris, '10, has quit writing since 

 he began to count the elk on the Te- 

 ton. This game preservation is quite 

 a job, and we sympathize with Maris. 



Morse, '09, holds forth in the Tar- 

 ghee Forest where sheep are grazed 

 wholesale and retail, chiefly the for- 

 mer; and evidently it is keeping Morse 

 so busy looking after his grazing bus- 

 iness that he does not write. 



Cook, '10, likewise has joined the 

 silent squad since he has become Pro- 

 fessor of Forestry at the University 

 of Idaho. 



Gulches, '09, paid us a visit, stayed 

 a few days, and related his experience 



in the Indian Service. He likes the 

 Indians, gets along with the people, 

 believes in timber sales on a simple 

 basis, prefers the automatic increase 

 in stumpage prices in sale contracts, 

 and has a very clear and broad view 

 of the entire forestry situation in the 

 Indian Department. 



White, '06, is making a model for- 

 est of the "Bittar Root." He has 

 laid stress on- the building of roads 

 and trails, and as a result an auto 

 might go to most of the Ranger sta- 

 tions. This has changed the "Bitter 

 Root" from an almost inaccessible 

 range to a tourist's paradise; and peo- 

 ple are not slow to discover this fea- 

 ture, which, by the way, is going on 

 to a large extent in all National For- 

 ests, and is going to develop tourist or 

 summer travel 'more than all other 

 agencies combined. 



Duppert, '10, is still at the Univer- 



