ee 
—_ 

ae 
NON GRADUATES CLASS OF 1904 93 

and soldier in the Civil War. He has one brother, Carl Imes, a graduate 
of the South Dakota State Normal School. A sister, Jennie May Imes, 
is now deceased. 
Before entering the School he was graduated from the South Dakota 
State Normal School and was for two years student assistant in the 
Division of Forestry. 
He was married December 31, 1903, in Lincoln, Neb., to Miss Hanna 
Charlotte Christiansen of Spearfish, S. Dak., daughter of H. J. Chris- 
tiansen. They have one son, Richard Perry Imes, born August 24, 1906, 
in Deadwood, S. Dak., and one daughter, Karen Charlotte Imes, born 
November 5, 1903, in Ogden, Utah. A daughter, born June 16, 1905, 
died the same day. 
Imes has been continuously in the United States Forest Ser- 
vice since leaving the Yale Forest School. He was forest 
assistant from 1903 to 1905 and forest inspector from 1905 to 
1908. In 1909 he was appointed chief of operation, District 4, 
and since 1910 he has been supervisor of the Harney National 
Forest, South Dakota, with headquarters at Custer. 
He attends the Congregational church and in politics is a 
Bull Moose. He is a member of the Masonic Lodge of Custer, 
S. Dak., and of the Ogden Business Men’s Club of Ogden, Utah. 
*TLouis C. Miller 
Died 1910 
Louis Christian Miller was born in 1873 in Joplin, Mo. 
He received the degree of B.S. in 1901 at the Oklahoma Agricultural 
and Mechanical College and before entering the Forest School was 
registered for one year in the graduate department of the Sheffield 
Scientific School. He took the courses of Junior year in the Forest 
School. 
Miller entered the Bureau of Forestry immediately after leav- 
ing the Forest School, served first as a forest assistant, and later 
became field assistant in the section of which he later became 
chief. In the Forest Service he had devoted himself to work 
directly connected with forest extension and he was recognized 
as an expert in planting. At the time of his death he was chief 
of the section of planting in District 2. 
He died at Denver, Colo., on July 16, 1910, following an opera- 
tion for appendicitis. 
