. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. merit and sales push back of them. Cranberries have penty of merit and it is up to cranberry growers and their sales employees to give the push and keep on pushing. If they do this, and I think they will, the future of the cranberry indus- try is encouraging. In conclusion, I quote two para- graphs from a talk by Mr. Quentin Reynolds presented at the New Jer- sey Farmers' Week 31st Agricul- tural Convention, January 22, 1945: "A few of our egg marketing associations, the cranberry associa- tions, some fruit and nut coopera- ti
. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. merit and sales push back of them. Cranberries have penty of merit and it is up to cranberry growers and their sales employees to give the push and keep on pushing. If they do this, and I think they will, the future of the cranberry indus- try is encouraging. In conclusion, I quote two para- graphs from a talk by Mr. Quentin Reynolds presented at the New Jer- sey Farmers' Week 31st Agricul- tural Convention, January 22, 1945: "A few of our egg marketing associations, the cranberry associa- tions, some fruit and nut coopera- tives, some milk marketing co- operatives are among the few who are creating markets for the farm products of their producer mem- bers by methods commonly fol- lowed in other business enter- prises. The cotton, livestock, corn, wheat and tobacco producers — mention only some of the more im- portant groups — have done little or nothing to build markets ahead of their production, or to influence production of their members within effective demand. "As a consequence of this de- plorable lack of foresight during a time when farmers' capacity to pro- duce has been expanding pheno- menally, farmers have found them- selves — when not 'relieved' by droughts and wars — struggling with so-ca"led surpluses. To meet these situations they have resorted to government assistance. Most such plans other — other than the stamp, or consumer dole plan — are based on the demoralizing pre- mise that demand is frozen, is a pie of fixed size, and that the hope for farmers is to have that pie carved by government or under government orders and the slices handed to farmers. Such price policies discourage rather, than en- courage bigger pies, new and broad- er profitable outlets for capital and labor on and off the farm. Feather- bedding on the farm is just as much a drag on the economy as feather- bedding anywhere else. If we must consider feather-beds at all, let's remember that gen
Size: 2195px × 1138px
Photo credit: © The Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookcontributorumassamherstlibraries, bookspons