326 Recognition in America 



Th. W. Engelmann, Professor of Histology of the Physiological Labora- 

 tory of Utrecht, Netherlands. 



Dr. M. W. Beyerinck of Delft, Netherlands. 



Dr. Alfred Fischer of the University at Leipzig, Germany, later Basel, 

 Switzerland. 



Dr. Alfred Moller of Eberswalde, Germany. 



Dr. Hans Solereder of the University of Munich, Germany. 



Dr. Karl Tubeuf of the University of Munich, Germany. 



Professor Eugene Warming of the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. 



Professor H. Graf zu Solms-Laubach of the University of Strassbufg, 

 Germany. 



Dr. Max Gonnermann of Danzig and Rostock, Germany. 



Dr. Martin Mobius of Heidelberg, later Frankfurt, Germany. 



Charles Joly of Paris, France. 



W. T. Thistleton Dyer of Kew, England. 



Dr. Antonio Berlese of Portici, Italy. 



B. L. Ravaz of France. 



Dr. Henry Tryon, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. 



Dr. George Hieronymus, editor of Hedivigia, of Berlin, Germany. 



Professor Gaston Bonnier of the Sorbonne, Paris, France. 



Dr. P. A. Saccardo of the University of Padua, Italy. — the following, 

 1896 and after. 



E. Krober of Germany. Johann Bachmann of Germany. 



Dr. Jacob Eriksson of Albano, near Stockholm, Sweden. 



Dr. A. Zimmermann of Buitenzorg, Java. 



Dr. W. J. Behrens of Gottingen, Germany. 



Dr. N. A. Cobb, pathologist of the Department of Agriculture of 

 Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. 



Professor M. C. Potter, The Durham College of Science, Newcastle- 

 upon-Tyne, England. 



Maxwell T. Masters, editor Gardeners Chronicle, London, England. 



Burri and Stutzer of Germany (Breslau?). 



Dr. Charles Schilberszky of Budapest, Austro-Hungary. 



Dr. G. Lindau of Berlin, Germany. 



Carl Wehmer of Hannover, Germany. 



Dr. F. Ludwig of Greiz, Germany. 



Dr. Oscar Kirchner of Stuttgart, Germany. 



Dr. Karl Goebel of Munich, Germany. 



Among the earliest of his foreign correspondents had been the 

 Italians, Peglion, Savastano, and Cavara, and the German, Paul 

 Sorauer. By 1897 the names of most of the important figures in 

 plant pathology were on his lists. The early students of plant 

 bacteriology were included, and many, many American and Euro- 

 pean botanists, especially those interested in plant physiology. 

 Woronin of Russia was an early correspondent. So was Francis 



