96 CHARLES ANTHONY GOESSMANN 



thirty, he had come to this country with a relatively 

 similar training to that which he possessed in 1857, he 

 undoubtedly would have attacked and solved some of 

 the more intricate agricultural problems now con- 

 fronting us. He was contemporary with Hilgard of 

 California, Johnson of Connecticut, Cook of New 

 Jersey, and Kedzie of Michigan, all of whom greatly 

 widened the horizon and enriched our knowledge of 

 agricultural science and practice. 



J. B. L. 



