. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. i ' • - - '^ ^"i-te. i™. ^^Sm^^m •lKr~~ •' ' ^ • ii\ H^^ m m %i ARMY BARRACKS NOW WAREHOUSE Buying, througrh re-nee;otiation half of the Army barracks buildings at the Tri- City Airport, Wisconsin Rapids, and moving these to his bog at Biron, William F. Huffman obtained an economical and well-arranged warehouse- The barracks were built in five-foot sections and so were easily transported. At the marsh they were re-assembled in the form of a big "T", with the sections long and narrow, giving excellent cross ventilatio


. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. i ' • - - '^ ^"i-te. i™. ^^Sm^^m •lKr~~ •' ' ^ • ii\ H^^ m m %i ARMY BARRACKS NOW WAREHOUSE Buying, througrh re-nee;otiation half of the Army barracks buildings at the Tri- City Airport, Wisconsin Rapids, and moving these to his bog at Biron, William F. Huffman obtained an economical and well-arranged warehouse- The barracks were built in five-foot sections and so were easily transported. At the marsh they were re-assembled in the form of a big "T", with the sections long and narrow, giving excellent cross ventilation and good lighting for storage and sorting space. CRANBERRY SCOOPS and SCREENINGS "Pai-ade", the picture supple- ment appearing in Sunday news- papers of the country, on Novem- ber 25th (and presumably noted by many cranberry growers), carried nearly four pages of photograps and story concerning the cranberry industry, as was mentioned last month. "Berries of the Bog" was the heading and it showed three boys and three girls, pupils at Middleboro (Massachusetts) High school, spending a day picking cranberries on a bog at Middle- boro. The boys and girls were shown leaving the High school on bikes, arriving at the bog, starting to woi-k; the boys scooping, and the gir's by hand; carrying berries ashore with a wheelbarrow, and then preparing a turkey dinner with cranberry sauce. This "cran- berry outing" was arranged by representatives of "Parade" in cooperation with A. D. Benson and Miss Sue A. Pitman of New Eng- land Cranberry Sales Co. A tur- key-baking scene was taken in the kitchen of Mr. Benson's old New England house at Lakeville. The article carried some information about Cape Cod's cranberry indus- try: that three-quarters of the crop is gi'own in Southeastern Massa- chusetts and would bring the grow- ers "close to $10,000,000 this ; "Parade Quick Quiz" i-e- vealed that cranberries were also grown


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