. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. cultural training from the Univer- sity of Wisconsin, had this scien- tific knowledge. To the Wisconsin grower who wanted the answer to a technical problem, Goldy "gave out". Tremendously interested m everything pertaining to cranber- ries, cultural, marketing, govern- mental wartime rules and reguula- tions, he stored his mind with all manner of exact information, al- ways on tap, as is the data in a scrupulously-kept reference de- partment. But probably the most impor- tant ingredient in the Goldsworthy formula for succ


. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. cultural training from the Univer- sity of Wisconsin, had this scien- tific knowledge. To the Wisconsin grower who wanted the answer to a technical problem, Goldy "gave out". Tremendously interested m everything pertaining to cranber- ries, cultural, marketing, govern- mental wartime rules and reguula- tions, he stored his mind with all manner of exact information, al- ways on tap, as is the data in a scrupulously-kept reference de- partment. But probably the most impor- tant ingredient in the Goldsworthy formula for success in his job was the constructiveness of his nature. This was evidenced by many pro- jects he put through to the benefit of all Winconsin growers. To name a few, these have included buying of growers' supplies, the issuance of circulars, tax advice and assistance, the starting of GI training program, starting cran- berry nursery, cranberry research and experimental work, worked out fireworm control by spraying for Wisconsin, first on own marsh (now followed by other growers), proving the value of bees in Wis- consin cranberry pollination, on own bog in 1943 (another practice now followed by many other grow- ers), use of paper bags for ship- ping of canning berries, airplane dusting, legislation for the benefit of cranberry growers. These were all creative efforts. In fact, he got into the cranberry game through a creative effort. At the University of Wisconsin he majored in entomology and plant pathology and minored in horticul- ture; incidentally he had senior class honors and received B. S. and M. S. degrees. He created his master thesis upon a cranberry topic. It was entitled "Cranberry False Blossom". During the sum- mers, while at Wisconsin Univer- sity and for a year or two after teaching physics and chemistry at the high school at Prairie du Sac, he served as assistant cranberry specialist to the late L. M. Rogers, there having been this cranberry state speci


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