. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. The New England Cranberry Sales Company, by continuing to add to its membership increases the bene- fits to cranberry growers, and further stabilizes the mar- ket for cranberries by the various methods of marketing. It has been stated recently that "in many fields of business the need for the cooperative movement to assist producers and consumers to resist the unfair practices of monopolies is even greater today than ever before". oo The Sales Company with its associated Companies is in the fortieth year of cooperative se


. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. The New England Cranberry Sales Company, by continuing to add to its membership increases the bene- fits to cranberry growers, and further stabilizes the mar- ket for cranberries by the various methods of marketing. It has been stated recently that "in many fields of business the need for the cooperative movement to assist producers and consumers to resist the unfair practices of monopolies is even greater today than ever before". oo The Sales Company with its associated Companies is in the fortieth year of cooperative service. New England Cranberry Sales Co. 9 Station Street Middleboro, Massachusetts Belvoir, Virginia. He was with a photo-topographical unit in Colo- rado and Oklahoma. Called back to Washington, he was assigned to the Office of Strategic Services, and was later sent overseas by that office to do intelligence work in England, France and Germany. When discharged from service last January he held the rank of first lieutenant. His grandfather, Henry Horn- blower, and his father, Ralph A. Hornblower of Hornblower & Weeks, investment brokers, have had cranberry interests since about 1910, although these inter- ests have been largely financial. Ralph Hornblower is president of Cape Cod Company and Harry is affiliated with that company. All last summer Harry studied with Dr. Franklin and his asso- ciates at the Cranberry Experi- ment Station in East Wareham, visited bogs and growers, and gen- erally acquainted himself with the problems of cranberry culture. This fall he is working in the Cape Cod Company's screenhouse and at the Stokely plant in New Bedford, where he is learning cranberry processing techniques. Harry is chairman of the Pilgrim Village Committee of the Pilgrim Society at Plymouth. This com- mittee expects to construct a rep- lica of Plymouth, with Pilgrim homes and other buildings, as it was in the early days of the Colony. He is married and has a young son, "H


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