eS  - 

GRADUATES CLASS OF 1905 103 

Baltimore, 1907; The histology of resin canals in white fir, dm. For., June, 
1910; The basket willow, By William F. Hubbard . . . with a summary 
by C. D. Mell, Farmer’s Bull., 341; Notes on the identification of a 
tropical wood, Am. For., Aug., 1910; Pennsylvania-German plant names, 
Pa. Ger., XI, No. 9, Sept., 1910; Pennsylvania-German names of trees, 
Pa. Ger., XI, No. 12, Dec., 1910; Practical results in basket willow cul- 
ture, Circ. 148, U. S. Forest Service; Production and consumption of 
basket willows in the United States for 1906 and 1907, Circ. 155, U. S. 
Forest Service; The use of willow rods by the ancient Germans, Pa. 
Ger., XI, No. 10, Oct., 1910; Classification of woods by structural 
characters, Am. For., April, 1910; Consumption of basket willows in the 
United States for 1908, For. Quart., 1911; A confusion of technical 
terms in the study of wood structure, For. Quart., Dec., 1911; History 
of the investigation of vessels in wood, Proc. Soc. Am. Foresters, V1, 
No. 1, 1911; Fiber lengths of the woods of trees grown under different 
soil and site conditions, For. Quart., 1910; Identification of North 
American walnut woods, Bull. 120, U. S. Forest Service; Circassian 
walnut and its substitute, Circ. 210, U. S. Forest Service. 
Walter J. Morrill 
Business address, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. 
Residence, 1848 Prospect Street, Lincoln, Neb. 
Walter Jean Morrill was born April 17, 1875, in Madison, Maine, the 
son of Cyrus David Morrill, assistant surgeon, U. S. Regulars, during a 
portion of the Civil War, and Clara Maria (Flint) Morrill. Their 
ancestors came to Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630 and 1632 and were 
related to a Mayflower family. They had two other children: Martelle 
Flint Morrill, Maryland Medical College ’o4, and Ella Maria Morrill. 
He prepared at the high school and Coburn Classical Institute, Water- 
ville, Maine, was graduated at the University of Maine with the degree 
of B.S. in 1899 and before entering the Yale Forest School taught two 
years in New Hampshire and two years in South Carolina. He was a 
member of Kappa Sigma. 
He was married September 18, 1907, in Parkersburg, W. Va., to Miss 
Katharine Cook Stone, daughter of Selden Stone and Victoria (Cook) 
Stone. 
Morrill served as forest assistant on several forests in Colo- 
rado from 1905 to February, 1908; as deputy supervisor of 
the Pike National Forest, Colorado, from February, 1908, to 
July, 1910; as supervisor of the Rio Grande National Forest, 
July, 1910, to November 15, 1911; and as forest examiner in 
