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Page 15 text:
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1 3 X ' 1 7 '1.'j.E.j I:-,f 1 ' H .tfvvx j'xQ.:' 1,Q g, ,wt gp 'If A131 H- w 1 V114 ' XX,f11f',-W1 Y 11- Q .1 1. 1 1 JS 1 CELL? lg gf. -,1,,1,, Mm -.11-...11.- .1,-..-.. , ,S .-.- ,,1. ..L.1 , .- .. , - ,.....,,,n.,.. ,MQ I HENRY PRENTISS ARMSBY Died October 19, 1921 1 R 1 N 1 5 Q gT1,f..4f.,f4,4,Tah 1 X5 1 ' ,fgffrif 1 fisgifegk rgx 1 1 Q .1 1 1 K. .-.-...w,-.,- A ,mf 14.3 H..- .... -,..,,, ',.-xA,.-,,N V--MM AVVAV WSJ 1 XT , ,T-bl Il
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Page 14 text:
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..,- ,. .,Kg NVQ W I an-' vi M - c ITM' . . v-YV? xwgz '-'gygv:w-i7pyN:wr-- 'jv :'ffgfe:: 'vf':x 4-1-'mgyrv-rv-err ' Q '1 vm.--A 'F 1 1 ff P59 . 1 M' - i 'Nw is-. '1.T-PM-1, Fl I ' i l'x.'xYlr'l ' AQQPB 9' VN J ob YA- f' SMHU' N 1. '-1'f i ,IR 1 .. Henry Prentiss Armsby Hl' death of Henry Prentiss Ximsby on October 19 1991 I new and xigorous State College of the present eia to the removed another of the increasingly few links that bind the i ' , ,- - 2 - , - 1 -, - .-..-,,,.,,,,l struggling little St ite College of the pioneer days. Ile had been a member of the college faculty for thirty-four years and he was outranked in length of service by only one member of the teaching force. Dr. Armsby was born in Northbridge, Massachusetts, September 21, 1853. His life as a scholar began early. He finished his high school course at Milbury, Massachusetts, at fifteen, and at once entered the first class to be matriculated at the lNorcester Polytechnic Institute. ln 1871. at the age of eighteen, he was given the degree of B. S. from the insti- tution, and it is pleasing to know that in june, 1921, he was able to return to his alma mater to celebrate with the surviving members of his class -the most honored and distinguished of them all-the semi-centennial of his graduation. The following years he spent largely in preparation for his chosen profession of agricultural chemistry. He was instructor for a year at the Polytechnicg then he entered the Sheffield Scientihc School of Yale, receiving in 1874 the degree of Ph. B., and still later the degree of Ph. D. For a time he taught chemistry, notably at Rutgers College. li1'0111 1877 to 1881 he was chemist of the Connecticut Experiment Station, pre- paring during this period and publishing in 1880 his first book, Manual of Cattle Feeding, to this day an authority on the subject. His progress was rapid now. He was made vice principal of what is now the State College of Connecticut in 18813 was called to the chair of agricultural chemistry and made associate director of the Experiment Station of the University of VVisconsin in 18835 and four years later, when the agricul- Y N, I U PM W M .... ,,,,. '?J'W'f'9 f1E'1,ii'TW intl' iii xrgqa,-pil 'Ht' ., ,ug fF:i1vu-lyk iw N all ,, .M ,ii .1 ' tt. ,A K iii il if, ,, lx' 1,5231 F 1-:!.2, ,l 1 111 5 A m- Q, N ' fy L a. , .Q , l'.1 1,' it E, Ad :ia Qwfgifgyfi ll W - ,I AL.2tiJn if - fab 'U i . '1'E.f..y'i 1 .1 Z'f1f 'Si51 . 'v-'v' 1 X' , :JF 11. : in 45445 'I .1 '1 H i .,., ..,. 1. ila?.L..L1L.LlKS1' V, 13.-ll. ::.f.ff?lX.k ,M All Mi' 1, ' 'V 'LJ' - ' A' ' ' ' ' i '41 I 10
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Page 16 text:
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.c -s '- -. ,fx 'rv' ,za fr ' gr ,, . 2'r1'fy f'Q f':v'f 7g'r 's:y , 2-'3' Q . Q: 'f,., , 7. lg . rg, , 'UQ P ,V .fg,1t,7-,5,x,l-'T 'w tr i . .,., Mr 0 la. Ktlgfjbrf 1-K wif- ' - 1 5:-l.:gt. ,v .ffpflf i Hg' ll' WN' ll i if .ax 4-fu-tzws' . J, X 7 in '-A N' .W at if' Q-Hixlxf 1. bpfzfi JA ll , ,. t 4 M yi, , 0 y ,. . , ,, . I ll, Ii fist: ' ' l, -fl fi X 'A , l U .11-1 .11.L1 ...1L, Q .1-LL1 ,a. .111. tural experiment station of Pennsylvania was organized and located at the Pennsylvania State College, he was chosen as its lirst director. The rest of his life he gave in its fullness to the struggling young college which, when he entered it, was practically unknown even in Pennsylvania. The story of the agricultural department during the next twenty-five years is largely the story of his life, He organized it, he brought it before the stateg he planned its courses and its policies: and he started it strongly in the directions it has since followed. In 1890, when the college was first organized into schools, he was made dean of the School of Agriculture. In 1902 he resigned as dean to be more free for research work and his title during recent years has been Professor of Animal Nutrition and Director of the Institute of Animal Nutrition. Dr. Arn1sby's crowning work, the one that gave him the widest recognition in the scientific world, was the construction of his respiration calorimeter, the only one of its kind in the world, and the series of ex- periments which he carried on by means of it in the field of animal nutri- tion. In 1904, at the Jubilee of the University of Wlisconsin, President Van Hise, conferring upon him the degree of Doctor of Laws, summed up his life work largely in terms of this crowning achievement: Henry Prentiss Armsby, formerly professor at this University, with the aid of ingeniously devised apparatus you have for years been successfully working upon the very important problems of metabolism of food nutri- ments. Upon you. for these valuable researches on the nourishment of the body, and for vigorous administration of the Pennsylvania State Agricultural Experiment Station, we confer the degree of DOC'fO1' Of Laws. , Other honors came to him in rich measure. ln 1893 he was made Chairman of the Committee on the Experiment Station Exhibit at the Chicago Columbian Exposition, and in 1900 he did the same service for the Paris Exposition. From 1898 to 1899 he was President of the Asso- wl M.-xx, 1 1 is X 'T Xlwiw I 1 l N ,..,,.,.! . --1. ,.,, I tray? -v Magik -ew gwvahry 'jg ., r ,li gel ,l, l, 15,35 5, 133,153 1 ll, ll -pm, ly Q, fi, ,li 1, i W? 1, wry i ll M.-1:iifTi2f'H :WT 4' 1' 'QV fm, ' 'Will ' l I I H ,ll l l -W L ful ,.'- 1, ,-:1 ,v 3,2 -r 1. , --.-1 y-' ' K 12
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