. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. lateral percolation from some point of higher elevation which may be at some distance away where the artesian bed comes to the surface or is not confined by the impervious stratum. Artesian wells are those which tap this type of bed. Their water level generally stands at different elevations than the water level in wells tapping the water- table bed above. If the point of intake of the water in the artesian bed is sufficiently high above that of the wall, the water can flow out of the well. The Cretaceous beds underlying the glacia


. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. lateral percolation from some point of higher elevation which may be at some distance away where the artesian bed comes to the surface or is not confined by the impervious stratum. Artesian wells are those which tap this type of bed. Their water level generally stands at different elevations than the water level in wells tapping the water- table bed above. If the point of intake of the water in the artesian bed is sufficiently high above that of the wall, the water can flow out of the well. The Cretaceous beds underlying the glacial deposits on Cape Cod probably contain good strata. (Continued next month) J. W. Darlington The cranberry industry suffered a great loss in the death of Joseph White Darlington, Sunday, August 14th. He was killed while flying his own plane near Whitesbog, New Jersey. No details of the fatality are known as this issue goes to press, except that memor- ial services will be held at the FOR SALEâ323 acres virgin bog land. Located on Pacific OceanâVancouver Island, Brit- ish Columbia. 90 acres cleared, remainder light timber. Inquir- ies invited % this magazine. home of t)r. Emlen P. Darlington, New Lisbon, N. J., Thursday, Aug. 20, at 2 p. m. Fourth Generation Cranberry Grower Calvin Burleigh, son of Calvin Clement Eldredge and Mary (At- kins) Eldredge, is one of the in- dustry's youngest growers and has one of the longest lines of cran- berry men behind him. The cranberry tradition descends through the maternal side, and Alvin Cahoon, one of the Cape's pioneer growers around 1840, is his great-great-grandfather. Jos- eph N. Atkins, who was a sea cap- tain as well as bog owner in the 1880s, is his great-grandfather, and Joseph B. Atkins, a grower from boyhood to the present time, is his grandfather. Calvin's moth- er and father are growers. Brought up in Harwich, where many of the Cape's bogs are lo- cated, all of the various aspects of cranberry culture are secon


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