NON GRADUATES CLASS OF 1905 117 

sota. In this study extensive growth and volume measurements 
were made in typical groves of various planted species with the 
idea of finding out the relative value of each species for further 
planting. 
“During the summer of 1906 a thorough planting reconnaissance 
was made of the Wasatch Forest in Utah with a view toward 
extensive reforestation of the denuded watersheds from which 
the city of Salt Lake derives its water supply, and in the spring 
of 1907 the Wasatch Nursery was established for the purpose 
of growing the needed planting stock. Since then this and other 
large nurseries in the district have become centers for distri- 
bution to other forests. 
During the summer of 1908 I was a general inspector in 
District 4 with headquarters at Salt Lake. Since then I have 
been in charge of the reforestation work in District 4 with 
headquarters at Ogden, Utah. 
He was brought up in the Lutheran Evangelical church of the 
General Council. He is a member of the Society of American 
Foresters, American Forestry Association, National Geographic 
Society and the Utah Pharmaceutical Association (honorary). 
He has published: Forest planting on the northern prairies, Circ. 145, 
U. S. Forest Service, March 20, 1908; Forest planting in national forests— 
1. Reforestation in the intermountain region, For. Quart., VII, No. 2, 
June, 1909; Ferns of Texas; Forests of Texas; Forestry investigations 
in the Dakotas; Forest extension in the Dakotas. 
David G. Kinney 
United States Forest Service, San Diego, Calif. 
Home address, Care A. E. Muth, 524 Hale Avenue, Avondale, 
Cincinnati, Ohio 
David Golden Kinney was born March 4, 1879, in Utica, N. Y., the . 
son of Thomas Edward Kinney, LL.B. University of Virginia Law 
School, a lawyer (died in November, 1901), and Fanny (Golden) Kinney, 
daughter of David Golden, of Utica, N. Y. He is of Irish ancestry on 
his father’s side and of Holland Dutch on his mother’s. He has two 
brothers and a sister: Edward Kinney, studied at Harvard from 1904 
to 1907, Thomas Edward Kinney, Williams ex-’09, and Rose Kinney, New 
York Art School. 
He was prepared at the Utica Free Academy and at St. Paul’s School, 
Concord, N. H., graduating in 1898. The following year he entered 
