. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. Louis Sherman turns Western upside down al ! . :.. :- -.^.'^ ;'iioio) WATER RAKING (Continued from Pao-'= 7^ release from the hospital Mrs. Dana was to visit among friends in the industry for recuperation to return to Wisconsin. The machines remained in Massachusetts for further tests. (We hope, after an evaluation of results of the wet raking and ma- chine drying to have a compre- hensive and competent article set- ting forth the prospects.) READ Cranberries Magazine Twelve NCA Expects '57 Net Of $ There i


. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. Louis Sherman turns Western upside down al ! . :.. :- -.^.'^ ;'iioio) WATER RAKING (Continued from Pao-'= 7^ release from the hospital Mrs. Dana was to visit among friends in the industry for recuperation to return to Wisconsin. The machines remained in Massachusetts for further tests. (We hope, after an evaluation of results of the wet raking and ma- chine drying to have a compre- hensive and competent article set- ting forth the prospects.) READ Cranberries Magazine Twelve NCA Expects '57 Net Of $ There is no surplus today in hards of NCA, Kenneth Gnvside, present Acting Manager, has said pnd the co-op had received orders for slightly more than ,000 fiRes of canned sauce, enough to finish off the 195S crop and to cut. into slightlv more than 1, cases or 100,000 barrells of this year's nroduction. The .3 million and a half order was durinf August and at the old price of $ a case. The new nrice of $ became effective September first. If there are no "nnr>pilp+;ons Mr. Garside believes NCA will b? able to close out the 1956 pool about October 15. a »"onth earlier than anticipated. The 1956 cron should net to the grower approximately $ minus stock aid retain. Mr. Garside is holding firm at the present that an estimate of SIO net for 1957 to growers will be realized. Grower-members as they turn in fruit are getting an ad- vance of § a barrel, less screening charges for those which the grower had not screened. As further regards the sur- plus he said for a while it was nip and tuck if there were suffi- cient reserve berries to turn out sauCo before the current crop came in. It was necessary to ship .â !ome fruit from Massachusetts to the plant at North Chicago. He described the situation now as "comfortable" and that prod'io- tion in plants was going up. On the 16th 16,800 cases were pro- cessed at the Onset Please note


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