104 YALE FOREST SCHOOL 

Washington, D. C., until the fall of 1912. He is now professor 
of forestry at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. His 
previous experience in teaching was as professor of forestry in 
the Colorado School of Forestry, Colorado Springs, Colo., 
during 1909-10. 
He writes: “My work in the Forest Service in Colorado has 
made me personally familiar with practically all of the moun- 
tainous portions of that state and with most phases of forest 
service field work there. 
“A scholastic year of teaching forestry in the Colorado 
School of Forestry gave me the opportunity to review the 
courses I had taken in Yale after some years of practical expe- 
rience with the result that I am particularly interested in the 
subject of forest regulation, or management.” 
He is a member of the Congregational church. He is a 
Progressive Republican, a Blue Lodge Mason and a member 
of the Society of American Foresters. 
He has published: National forests of southwestern Colorado: ~ 
their resources and conservation, Bull. U. S. Forest Service. 
Harry C. Neal 
Dravosburg, Pa. 
Harry Camble Neal was born in Dravosburg, Pa., in 1882. 
He was prepared at Pennsylvania State College Preparatory School and 
received the degree of B.S. at Pennsylvania State College in 1903. 
Upon graduation from the Yale Forest School in 1905 Neal 
was appointed a forest assistant in the United States Forest 
Service. He has furnished no information for this record. 
John M. Nelson, Jr. 
Pottsville, Pa. 
John Marbury Nelson, Jr., was born March 9, 1883, in Baltimore, Md., 
the son of John Marbury Nelson, a banker, of Nelson, Cook & Company, 
of Baltimore, Md., son of C. K. Nelson and Mary C. (Marbury) Nelson, 
and Ella Martha (Delaplaine) Nelson, daughter of Edwin and Elizabeth 
(Charlton) Delaplaine. They had four other children: Edwin D. Nelson, 
Alexander C. Nelson, William M. Nelson and Mary C. Nelson. 


