MAINE FORESTRY DISTRICT D3 
is a large, roomy camp, built of shaved spruce logs, with full-size 
doors and’ windows and will stand inspection by any State official. 
The automobile furnished by the Department was of great 
assistance.Aand is in first-class condition. It is stored at the home 
of your Chief Warden in Levant, Maine. 
SUGGESTIONS FOR 1920. 
The trail from Grant Farm to Spencer Mountain should be cut 
out and fixed suitable for a team. Also a camp should be built at 
the spring at the foot of the Mountain. There should be a watch- 
man’s camp built at Soubungo Mountain out of sawed lumber. The 
material should be placed there on snow this winter. 
Lumber or some other suitable material should be furnished to 
build a garage at Chesuncook Dam; also covering for a wood shed. 
There are several small improvements that your Chief Warden 
will take up later for your consideration. 
John M. Brown, Eagle Lake, Chief Warden Fish River Territory. 
District No. 2. 
We have had a very favorable summer in my section, frequent 
light showers preventing the fires from getting started, although 
the ground remained very dry most of the time. There were no 
heavy rains to wet down any depth. I have no recollection of 
ever seeing the waters so low in streams of all kinds as they were 
at the close of the season. 
Only three small fires were reported from the lookout stations, 
and they were put out with very slight damages being done. 
I built a telephone line from Birch River Dam patrol camp to 
DeBoulie Mountain, eight miles, and connected this line direct into 
the Eagie Lake central office, a distance of one and one-half miles, 
on the telephone company’s poles; also built a line one and a half 
miles to connect the Whitman Camps on to this line and installed 
a telephone in the camps which are situated at Island Pond 15 
Range 9, making this line total length about 21 miles. 
Repaired and put in good condition all the fire lines in my terri- 
tory, and they were in good condition all summer until the big wind 
storm, which demoralized all lines in general. 
I built a temporary cabin at the foot of DeBoulie Mountain, 
on the shore of DeBoulie Lake, for the watchman to live in, roofing 
it with bark and installing a telephone therein. I would suggest 
building a larger camp there and covering with shingles so as to 
store canoe, fire-fighting utensils, etc., at close of season. 
