Transcription:
To explore the mountain regions of the Pacific Coast; to publish authentic information concerning them; to enlist the and
the Government in preserving the forests and other natural features of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Board of Directors-1911-1912
Mr. John Muir. President . . . . MartinezProf. A. G. McAdie, Vice-President . San Francisco Prof. J. N. Le Conte, Treasurer
. . . Berkeley Mr. William E. Colby, Secretary . . San Francisco Prof. Wm. F. Bade . . . . . . Berkeley Prof. Vernon L. Kellogg
. . Stanford UniversityVice Prof. E. C. Franklin, resignedProf. W. C Morgan BerkeleyMr. E. T. Parsons San FranciscoMr. Willoughby
Rodman Los Angeles Outing Committee Prof. J. N. Le Conte Mr. E. T. ParsonsMr. Wm. B. Colby. Chairman and Manager Mr. Clair
S. Tappaan, ( Los Angeles) Assistant Manager Honorary Vice-Presidents Prof. George Davidson . . . San FranciscoMr. R. U.
Johnson . The Century, New YorkPres. David Starr Jordan . Stanford UniversityMr. Gifford Pinchot Washington, D. C. Committee
on Publications Prof. Wm. F. Bade. Editor .... BerkeleyMrs. E. T. Parsons, Book Reviews BerkeleyProf. J. E. Church. Jr. Mr.
Elliot McAllisterMr. Wm. E. Colby Mr. E. T. ParsonsMiss Anita Gomperts Prof. H. W. RolfeMr. J. S. Hutchinson, Jr. San Francisco,
March 27, 1913. Darling Helen:- I am very much relieved to get your letter. I was afraid that you were sick and did not
want to let me know. As to the furniture that you mention, you are welcome to all of it and I talked the matter over with
Wanda and she said she would go right about it with Tom and see that it was all properly packed and shipped immediately as
soon as it could be got together. I am glad that you are going back to the desert because there is always danger that even
in that sunny south that you might be attacked by the grippe, and it is a fine thing that you not only find perfect health
there, but that you so fully enjoy it. I sympathize with you in your love for those mountains and the various lights they
show, truly a fairyland at times, so unlike what is usually called a desert. It is a desert in the same sense as the new Jerusalem
is a desert. I have been hoping to get down to see you, but I know that it would onlymake more work for you and you have
so much trouble in keeping servants, besides the house is hardly large enough, and then into the bargain, when I gathered
all my notes on Alaska and put them into shape so that I could work them up and put them together, I found that it was a very
difficult job and would take a long time, and if I should leave my room, I would have to gather up all those notes, put them
together in bundles again and take them down to the Bank Vault, so I have been trying to get a first draft of the book and
then get a typewriter and get it put together, but it is a very long job and will probably be way into summer before that
book is ready for the publisher- that is another reason why I have not been down. In moving, take things easy, don't hurry,
don't overdu in getting everything to suit you, but settle down a little at a time. I suppose that the stuff will all be shipped
to Daggett. As to the few books I left at your house and odds and ends of clothing, simply tell Buel to put them in a box
and send them up to Martinez by express, so that I will have everything together, and by the way I think that the little daguerreotype
that I had which was given to Buel to be framed I have not received yet. Ask Buel about that and be sure to put that in the
box. I have managed to keep warm and have had no colds this winter, and am perfectly well, although I get pretty tired and
sometimes a little hungry. Always remember that your health is the main things that no expense stands in the way of anything,
that you need for your comfort and Health. Goodby darling, I will begin to make the old journeys to Daggett after you get
settled. Ever your devoted father, illegible