But the thing to remember is this: The constitution of the 

 state is broader and the cause of forestry is better cared for 

 with the amendment. 



Friends of No. 9 must be patient and wait for the time until 

 the legislature becomes as enthusiastic as were the people 

 last fall. 



Sometimes it takes legislators longer time to become en- 

 thusiastic over certain measures than it does the electorate 

 that sends them to the capitol. 



Observations at the Utah Experiment Station show that aspen 

 sprouts from good stumps attain a maximum height grozvth dur- 

 ing the summer season of over one-half inch per day. 



The articles this month on "The Northwest Angle" and "The 

 Lake of the Woods" will serve to introduce to those unacquainted 

 with that region some of the beauty spots for which Minnesota 

 is noted. 



Sufficient ties were cut from the Wasatch forest from July to 

 January to amount at eight cents apiece stumpage to twenty-four 

 thousand dollars, more than is required to administer the entire 

 forest for twelve months. 



The U. S. forest service has just completed an estimate of the 

 timber of the Teton forest, adjoining the Yellowstone park on 

 the south, and finds that it contains sufficient spruce, fir, and pine 

 timber suitable for wood pulp to supply a mill of 150-ton a day 

 capacity. Power for such a mill can be supplied by Pine or 

 Rainey Creek, tributaries of the Snake River, and the Snake 

 River will transport the bolts of wood from forest to mill. 



8 



