vice". The b6ast of many of us IB that we are in the work for 

 tho love of It. If this is the case,' we certainly should bo 

 on the Job every minute. The man who lies down because he finds 

 a cnance will certainly find it will be his undoing in the long 

 run. Results are what we are after and that brings us to the 

 point of our editorial: "3y Their Works Ye Shall Know Them". 



A Forest officer's work is not Judged by the number of 

 letters he writes in to the office. He is rather Judged by his 

 works. 'Good work requires initiative, thoroughness, resource, 

 and tact. Somebody who will know whether or not you have em~ 

 ployed these qualities will cone along sooner or later, and you 

 won't have to be silver-tongued to convince that somebody of your 

 worth if your work shows it. 







'So butt right In and if you make mistakes, don't let it 

 phase you. A man Is more often condemned for what he does not 

 do than 'for what he does. Hubbard says "There's work to do. 

 Ring in, and be at "it". One period of preparation for the season 

 is about at an end. How much are we all going to do n ?or The 

 Good of The Service"? 



~" 



Boabryo Conservationists 







Solomon built a temple, and In the interim relieved 

 himself of proverbs, many of which are followed by people to this 

 day. One of his best reflections was to the effect that If a 

 child is brought up in the right way, he will not forsake his 

 early training when he grows up. There was a time when parents, 

 desiring to shape their children's characters rightly, fed tbfcfrr 

 impressionable brains .upon certain mushy "Wille" and "Susie" books 

 in ifcioh the tales related were so far from actual life as the 

 Diamond Dick 'novels which they so religiously scorned. The present 

 day tendency, however, is to give the child something to read that 

 bears on his everyday life, and in such a" way that he will be im- 

 pressed with facts as they actually exist. 



This was forcibly brought to our attention recently when 

 a member of this Forest received a Sunday School paper from his 

 youngor brother back east in which was an article entitled "Flro 

 Brigades of our national Forests". The article, which was il- 

 lustrated by cuts of the Bonne* Mountain Lookout Tower "and a fire- 

 fighting scene at Hobart Mills, was accurate in detail. It will 





