8 
BULLETIN 315, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 
up in standard containers (fig. 3). Under such conditions it is 
unprofitable, as a rule, to ship the "off sizes." The shipment of 
pony crates in a season such as 1914 tends to clog up the markets 
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Fig. 3.— A standard crate packed with 45 well-graded melons. 
with, the smaller-sized fruit, which retards sales and lowers the prices 
on the more desirable stock. 
The two packages that are used with best results are the standards, 
holding 45 melons (fig. 3), and the flat, holding 9 to 15 melons (fig. 4). 
The flat is an ideal package for the consumer if the retailer will edu- 
cate him to buy in the original units. It contains no more than an 
Fig. 4. — A flat crate of cantaloupes. This container is especially well adapted to the consuming trade 
that desires to buy in the original package. 
average-sized family can use to advantage without incurring waste 
or decay. The use of packages of odd sizes or types should be dis- 
couraged by receivers of cantaloupes in the market. Growers who 
