. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. Tribune Photo WEST GREETS EAST—Clarence J. Hall, editor and publisher of CRANBERRIES, the national magazine of the cranberry industry, being welcomed to Wisconsin's cranberry capital by Vernon Goldsworthy (left), manager of the Wisconsin Cranberry Sales Company, at the Milwaukee road station, as Mrs. Hall looks on. The visitors hail from Wareham, Mass., center of the cranberry area of the Cape Cod district. —From Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune Cranberries Editor on Trip to Wisconsin Tremendously Impressed By Growers' Progressivenes
. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. Tribune Photo WEST GREETS EAST—Clarence J. Hall, editor and publisher of CRANBERRIES, the national magazine of the cranberry industry, being welcomed to Wisconsin's cranberry capital by Vernon Goldsworthy (left), manager of the Wisconsin Cranberry Sales Company, at the Milwaukee road station, as Mrs. Hall looks on. The visitors hail from Wareham, Mass., center of the cranberry area of the Cape Cod district. —From Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune Cranberries Editor on Trip to Wisconsin Tremendously Impressed By Growers' Progressiveness Hospitality Boundless appear the cranberry marshes of Wis- consin's broad, flat terrain under the wide Wisconsin sky. Boundless is the hospitality of the Wisconsin growers, a hospitality so well known to those who have visited the Badger State. Boundless is the enthusiasm of the growers to produce bountifully this healthy fruit. Your editor and his wife have just visited the Wisconsin cranberry district during this time of the second World War. One purpose was to learn more about these Wisconsin growers who have achieved second place in cranberry production in recent years. Another was to attempt to interpret some of the "whys" as to the progress of Wisconsin in our cranberry industry and to observe how the growers there are meeting their wartime problems. We did add vastly to our backlog of firsthand knowledge about the progressive cranberry men of Wisconsin, in spite of the fact that the time was limited. The Wisconsin growers, their wives, and friends could not possibly have been kinder, nor more willing to provide information. Hospitality and cooperation were offered to a degree almost exhausting to this Easterner. Those who made the group trip to Wisconsin three years ago will under- stand what we mean. Such flattering attention was more than we de- served, we are forced to believe, unless it was given in considerable part as an expression of the high Twelv
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