Transcription:
FORESTRY COMMISSION. Several Members of the Commission Reached Helena this Morning from the National Park. John Muir,
the Distinguished California Scientist, is a Member of the Party. They are Examining the Forests on the Public Lands---Will
Leave Tomorrow. A party of distinguished scientists arrived in Helena this morning from the Yellowstone National Park and
are domiciled at the Helena. They are a part of what is known in Washington circles as the forestry commission of the National
Academy of Science--- learned men who are engaged by the government to advise upon various scientific subjects. As the name
indicates, the forestry commission has to do with the timber interests of the country, examining the forests upon the public
domain, reporting upon the character and growth of the trees thereon, and particularly making recommendations as to the best
methods of preserving the same. There are in the neighborhood 17,000,000 acres of forest land in the possession of Uncle Sam,
and the secretaries of the interior for successive administrations have endeavord by means of forestry commissions to ascertain
a vast amount of hitherto unknown information respecting the same. This commission is making examinations of the timber interests
of the far west with the view of recommending to Secretary of the Interior Smith the best policy to pursue with respect to
the preservation of these millions of acres forest in the Rocky Mountains. The party that arrived this morning consists of
Prof. C. S. Sergent, of Harvard college, chairman; General H. S. Abbott, of the United States corps of engineers; Prof. Arnold
Hague of the United States geological survey. and Prof. W. H. Brewer of Yale college. Traveling with the commission is Prof.
John Muir, the California geologist. He is not in the employ of the government, but happening to be in the east when the party
started for the west he accompanied it at the urgent request of several of the professors, who recognize in him one who knows
the mountains almost like a book, and who on an evpedition of this sort would be an invaluable companion. His name is a household
word on the Pacific coast. Every school boy in the west, if not in the east, is familiar with his vivid descriptions of Mt.
Shasta and the story of his discovery of the famous Muir glacier, so named in his honor, in Alaska. He will rmain with the
commission until it reaches the Pacific coast. Already the party has visited the forests in the Black Hills country and the
in the Yellowstone Park: They will leave here tomorrow for Belton, Flat head county, a station on the main line of the Great
Northern a few miles west of the main range. From that point an exploration of the McDonald lake country as far north as the
Canadian line will be made. Idaho, Washington and California will in succession be visited. Prof. Clifford Pinchott another
member of the commission, an eminent authority on forest matters, who has long been in the employ of the government, preceded
the others and has been in Montana several weeks. He is supposed to be studying and investigating in the western part of the
Blackfoot reservation.