NON GRADUATES CLASS OF Ig10 263 

He was prepared at the Robert Waller High School, Chicago, and the 
Lake Forest School, Lake Forest, Ill. He prepared for Cornell and 
entered the Sheffield Scientific School at Yale in Junior year, receiv- 
ing the degree of Ph.B. in 1900. 
He is unmarried. 
Leeper took courses in the Yale Forest School in connection 
with his work in Sheff. After graduation from the latter school 
he spent two months in forestry work with the Great Northern 
Paper Company of Bangor, Maine. He then spent several 
months in Europe and upon his return went with the Prudential 
Insurance Company of Newark, remaining until November, 
1911, when he became a bond salesman for Folsom & Adams, 
New York City. On May 1, 1912, he organized J. L. Leeper & 
Company, an automobile brokerage firm of which he is president. 
He is a member of the Dutch Reformed Protestant Church of 
Kingston, N. Y. 
Samuel B. Locke 
Business address, Hailey, Idaho 
Forest Service Building, Ogden, Utah 
Samuel Barron Locke was born March to, 1885, in Paris, Maine, the 
son of Samuel Barron Locke, who held several town offices and was a 
member of the state legislature, and Elva Estelle (Libby) Locke. He 
is of English ancestry. He has two sisters: Linda (Locke) Marshall 
and Mary (Locke) Gerrish. 
He was prepared at the Paris and Woodford (Maine) high schools 
and in 1908 received the degree of B.S. at the University of Maine, 
where he was a member of Sigma Chi and a corporal in the cadet 
corps. 
He was married January 1, 1912, in South Paris, Maine, to Miss 
Olive Chase Swett, daughter of Benjamin Swett and Imogene Andrews 
Swett. 
Locke is deputy forest supervisor of Sawtooth National Forest 
with headquarters at Hailey, Idaho. He writes: “The summer 
and fall of 1910 I spent on reconnaissance work in the Salmon 
National Forest, Idaho. The winter of 1910-11 in Ogden, Utah, 
on reconnaissance reports and maps. The spring, summer and 
fall of 1911 in general work on forest nursery, forest planting, 
surveying, etc., on the Sawtooth National Forest, Idaho. The 
