ANDREWS Better Raspberry 






















Best 
Medium Season 
a al tok Red Raspberry 
(Redpath Strain) 
Thrifty Home Owners Plant Andrews Latham 
Why pay 25c or 30c a pint for raspberries at the grocer’s when fresher 
berries can be grown so easily and cheaply at home. It’s thrifty to “grow your 
The Only own”. raspberries—to have all you want fresh or to can. There is great satis- 
faction, too, in eating berries of your own growing, picked fresh for each 
meal. You have no waste or shrinkage, and you get the full delicious flavor. 
Raspberry 
Ever to Successful Fruit Growers Plant Andrews Latham 
Because Latham is one of the most profitable raspberries in dollars and 
Receive cents, it has become the most widely planted and the most popular red rasp- 
berry in the United States today. It is a sure cropper and a heavy cropper. 
Th The fruit carries well to market and commands a premium. To get these out- 
ese standing results, it is, of course, essential to plant the Genuine Latham (Red- 
path Strain) and to secure healthy, “mosaic-free” stock. 
Two 
Medals Easy to Grow—Early to Bear 
Latham does not require expert attention. The plants are vigorous and 
bear abundantly. A good patch of Latham will last for years. Under good 
standard practice, they will give substantial pickings the second season. 
Apa 500 Crates per Ac re 
BILLS The “Minnesota Horticulturist” for January, 1941, in an article discussing 
the increased raspberry planting in northern Minnesota, reported a yield of 
For the price of 500 crates per acre from the Latham fields of Chester M. Hjelmhaug of Polk 
a few crates of ber: County. Figured at only the low price of $4.00 per crate, that would mean 
ries you get plants a return of $2,000.00 per acre. That’s more than many farmers get from 80 
that will give you acres of other crops and it’s more net profit than many get from a quarter 
all the raspberries ye ers 
you need for fresh 
fruit, for canning, LATHAM PRICES on page 30-A 
or for freezing. 
Cut your grocery 
bills by “Growing 
Your Own” La- 
tham. 












Prof. Alderman Says of Latham: 
“Its attractive coloring and firmness give it 
such favorable appearance on the market that 
it ordinarily commands a premium of fifty cents 
a case over and above the prices of the ordinary 
raspberry. I would say that our test plots of 
red raspberries at the Minnesota 
State Fruit Breeding Farm have 
given conclusive proof that 
raspberry growing is profit- 
able in this state. It 
is highly important 
to start with disease- 
free plants and fol- 
low up with suitable 
culture. Our test 
plots under such con- 
ditions yield- 
ed from 254 
to 294 24- 
pint crates 
per acre the PROF. W.H. ALDERMAN 

t third season Chief of Horticulture, 
after plant- University of Minnesota 
ing. 

Plant LATHAM 
for Home or Market 
[15] 
