. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. Upper, UN children prd pErents ride Edaville railway and see crrnbsrry ^'-'rvest in operaticn; Lower, Plvmouth Art Centre float, second prire winner in Plymouth Parade. (CRANBERRIES Photo) the trip from New York to Provi- dence, where they were met by pri- vate autos. Some were accona'pa- n'ed by their mothers or other older people. The group was di- rectly in charge of Robert Knox, public relations officer of the Insti- tute. Arriving Thursday they were guests of area families, these in- cluding Mr. and Mrs. Russell Makepeace, Mar


. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. Upper, UN children prd pErents ride Edaville railway and see crrnbsrry ^'-'rvest in operaticn; Lower, Plvmouth Art Centre float, second prire winner in Plymouth Parade. (CRANBERRIES Photo) the trip from New York to Provi- dence, where they were met by pri- vate autos. Some were accona'pa- n'ed by their mothers or other older people. The group was di- rectly in charge of Robert Knox, public relations officer of the Insti- tute. Arriving Thursday they were guests of area families, these in- cluding Mr. and Mrs. Russell Makepeace, Marion; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Morse, West Wareham; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hammond, East Wareham; Mr. and Mrs. Homer Gibbs, West Wareham; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Garside, Dux- bury; Mr. and Mrs. Ferris Waite, Plymouth; Mr. and Mrs. Keyser- ling, Plymouth; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Costello, South Carver; Miss Ellen Stillman, Hanson. Ei«rht Opening gun was the parade at Plymouth scheduled for 10:30 but late in getting underway. Leading was Brigadier-General Andrew J. Carr of Plymouth. The Abington High School band followed, then Plymouth High School, Plymouth Junior High and Paragon Park. There were clowns and kids dressed in "horrifying" costumes, the queen contestants and then-queen Bev- erly Richards wore in open cars. Floats from Town of Plymouth, Town of Kingston, Edaville Rail- way, which had locomotive No. 3 on a truck, tooting at intervals as it went along, winning first pa- rade pri-e money of S150; Na- tional Cranberry Association, a house made entirely of cans of cranberry sauce; Plymouth Cord- age Company, a sign stating "two industries were deep in the heart of the community," the making of rope since ancient times and of growing cranberries," Pilgrim Dis- trict Boy Scouts, Plymouth Ki- wanis Club, Plym'outh Rotary Club, and Rotary International which carried the UN children. Acco- mack Tribe Redmen, Plymouth Chamber of Commerce, Buttner Company, Cantoni Coa


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