GRADUATES CLASS OF 1903 53 

Christian Koch. His grandfather was Hans Peter Gyllemburg Koch of 
Denmark, a descendant of a long line of ministers of Kirkeburg, Denmark. 
He. has one brother, Stanley Koch, a graduate of West Point and 
lieutenant in the United States Army, and two sisters: Martha and 
Lucie Koch. 
He was prepared at the Bozeman High School. During the summer 
of 1899 he served as student assistant in the United States Forest Service 
in the state of Washington and in 1901 received the degree of B.S. from 
the Montana State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. 
He was married December 27, 1906, in Bozeman, Mont., to Miss Gerda 
Heiberg-Jiirgensen of Copenhagen, Denmark, daughter of Rasmus Emil 
Heiberg-Jiirgensen and Ingeborg Marie (Biering) Heiberg-Jiirgensen. 
Koch has been employed in the United States Forest Service 
since graduation from the Yale Forest School. In 1903-04 he 
was forest assistant, doing boundary work in California, Mon- 
tana and Wyoming. He was forest inspector in Montana and 
Wyoming in 1905-06, and since January 1, 1907, has been 
supervisor of Lolo National Forest, Missoula, Mont. 
He is a member of the Society of American Foresters. 
Francis G. Miller 
Business address, Wenatchee, Wash. 
Home address, Seattle, Wash. 
Francis Garner Miller was born June 2, 1866, in Lanark, IIll., the son 
of Isaiah Miller and Isabella Jane (Moffett) Miller. 
He received the degree of Bachelor of Didactics from the Iowa State 
Teachers College in 1893, and from that time until 1899 was superintendent 
of city schools in Iowa. In 1900 he received the degree of Ph.B. from 
the University of Iowa, and in 1901 the degree of B.S.A. from the Iowa 
State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. He entered the United 
States Forest Service in July, 1901. He is a member of Sigma Xi. 
He was married September 16, 1906, in Kansas City, Mo., to Miss 
Evelyn DePew Miller of Kansas City, Mo., daughter of G. W. Miller 
and Catherine DePew (Scruggs) Miller. 
Miller is manager of the Wenatchee Columbia Fruit Company 
of Wenatchee, Wash. He was professor of forestry at the 
University of Nebraska from 1903 to 1907 and dean of the 
School of Forestry, University of Washington, from 1907 to 
1912. He has held his present position since June, 1912. 
