. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. CRANBERRY GROWERS Cheapest Best ^. Easiest Does least damage Sand your cranberry bogs by the water spread (patented) method. We issue license and furnish blue prints for a small sum. Boats easily built. Improve your bogs and crop them at the same time. Better than sanding on ice. Let us send you pamphlet with full information. GROWERS APPLIANCE COMPANY CROSSWICKS, NEW JERSEY WE CO TO THE MOUNTAINS and pick wild mountain Cranberries in Maine in the fall. We see how plentiful they are and how they flourish to perfection without the a


. Cranberries; : the national cranberry magazine. Cranberries. CRANBERRY GROWERS Cheapest Best ^. Easiest Does least damage Sand your cranberry bogs by the water spread (patented) method. We issue license and furnish blue prints for a small sum. Boats easily built. Improve your bogs and crop them at the same time. Better than sanding on ice. Let us send you pamphlet with full information. GROWERS APPLIANCE COMPANY CROSSWICKS, NEW JERSEY WE CO TO THE MOUNTAINS and pick wild mountain Cranberries in Maine in the fall. We see how plentiful they are and how they flourish to perfection without the aid of fertilizer, or plant food furnished by human agency. The vines derive their nutriment from the vitalizing humus and mineral elements furnished by natural agencies. These sweet, un- tainted fertilizing materials alone are the cause of their perfect growth. We visit some of the wild, swamp cranberry bogs in Maine, neglected except at picking time. They have not been sanded, weeded, nor flooded as we flood bogs in Massachusetts. Yet the vines are healthy; we cannot find any false blossom and they are well fruited. We envy Nature's care of these wild bogs and wonder how we can duplicate the achievement. The only difference between Maine wild bogs and Massachusetts cultivated bogs is the difference in the soil conditions. Maine bog soils are better supplied with natural mineral elements. Massa- chusetts bog soils have plenty of humus, or muck under the sand but there is a shortage of the natural mineral elements. We go to the mountains in Maine to get the pure, sweet, non-stimulating, non-burning, untreated mineral elements, so you can remineralize your bog if you want to and in time duplicate the Maine conditions. The analysis made at Mass. Institute of Tech- nology by the new Spectroscopic method shows 34 mineral elements in Menderth, Nature's Preferred plant food. Sampson Morgan, an English grower and writer, stated—"Chemical strong foods (for plants) and concentrate


Size: 2326px × 1075px
Photo credit: © The Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookcontributorumassamherstlibraries, bookspons