. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. FLOODED WITH MAIL. Mail is heavy in EATMOR contest United States by properly hand- ling the cranberry "trash" may realize up to |500,000 more gross income per year. 1. Beaumont. Arthur 1947^Arti- ficial manures or the conservation and use of organic matter for soil improvement. Orange Judd Publishing N. Y. 2. Beaumont, Arthur 1949—Com- post for the garden. Univ. Mass, Extension Service Leaflet No. 155. 3. Bonner, James and Arthur W. Gal- ston, 1944—Toxic Substances from the Culture Media of Guayule which may


. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. FLOODED WITH MAIL. Mail is heavy in EATMOR contest United States by properly hand- ling the cranberry "trash" may realize up to |500,000 more gross income per year. 1. Beaumont. Arthur 1947^Arti- ficial manures or the conservation and use of organic matter for soil improvement. Orange Judd Publishing N. Y. 2. Beaumont, Arthur 1949—Com- post for the garden. Univ. Mass, Extension Service Leaflet No. 155. 3. Bonner, James and Arthur W. Gal- ston, 1944—Toxic Substances from the Culture Media of Guayule which may Inhibit Growth. The Botanical Gazette, Vol. 106: 185-198. 4. Kucinski. Karol J., 1942—Prepar- ation and Use of Artificial Manures. Univ. Mass. Agr. Expt. Bulj 395. 5. Proebsting, E. and A. E. Gilmore, The Relation of Peach Root Tox- icity to the Re-establishing of Peach Orchards. Proc. Amer. Soc. Horticultural Vol. 38:21-26. Thousands of Entries In Eatmor Contest Chambers and Wiswell, Eatmor Cranberries' advertising agency, is wading knee deep in cranberry limericks. As of November 1, nearly 20,000 consumer entries for that handsome Cadillac convertible offered in the Eatmor Limerick con- test had arrived at Boston. First entries in the contest ar- rived on September 10, and five or six more letters a day came drib- bling in during the next fortnight. Then, about September 25, entries started to arrive at the rate of 25 to 30 a day. By October 1 the count was up to 500 letters, and then the following week the mail started to increase consistently— at first, one or two good-sized packs, nexti a cartcnful, then by the sackful. When a collection was made at the Boston post office on Tuesday morning, October 14—the day af- ter the celebration of Columbus Day in Massachusetts—it was found that more than 1200 letters had accumulated since Friday af- ternoon. And more were arriving with every mail! Biggest mail to date was on Oc- tober 27, when 4,100 entries ar-


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