710 EXPEKIMENT STATION KECORD. 



ence of the demonstrator, and be eager to get as many suggestions as 

 possible from his attempts to teach the results to the farmers. If the 

 author of the work serves in the dual capacitj^ of experimenter and 

 demonstrator, he should be just as careful to keep the distinctions of 

 the two types of service clearly in mind. 



But the time is here in many States, and rapidly approaching in 

 others, when a man must be content to be primarily one thing or the 

 other, an experimenter or a demonstrator. He must make the choice, 

 for the opportunity now lies open in both fields. It is well that he 

 should consider the work and his interests carefully and then choose, 

 and having made his choice to shape his work accordingly. 



