Bright Red Berries 
ewb Us rg Resistant to Mosaic 
Heavy Yielding, Large Size and Highest Quality Fruits Make 
it a Most Desirable Variety for Home and Market Planting. 
Description of Newburgh 
1. Has so far proven most resistant to Mosaic. 
2. Very productive. Fruit very large and holds its large size over 
an unusually long season. Extremely hardy. 
3. The flavor is mild and quality good, decidedly better than 
Latham. 
-4, Berries are attractive bright red, very firm and do not crumble. 
5. Season of ripening is a few days earlier than Latham. 
6. Plants are medium in height; canes stocky and well branched. 
7. It is best to support the Newburgh canes with wire, stakes, or 
trellis as the heavy laden canes are often pulled to the ground. 















Cultural Suggestions for the 
Red Raspberries 
1. Planting distances and general care similar to 
Blackcaps (see pages 6 and 7). 
2. Prune fruiting canes back approximately one-fourth 
of their total length during late winter. Thin out weaker 
sprouts leaving strong fruiting canes 6 to 8 inches apart 
in the ‘‘hedgerow.”’ Be sure to take out old fruiting 
canes after harvest. 
3. Dust foliage with sulphur to control leaf spot. 
4. Cultivate thoroughly or mulch to retain moisture 
and keep weeds down. Check growth during August to 
mature wood that it may escape winter ingury. 
Attractive Newburgh Berries 
= Ext 
SUNTIS@ corked 


Ripens fully two weeks before Latham. Prolific We consider Sodus the best all around purple Rasp- 
fruiting, high quality, extreme hardiness and berry. Marion is larger in size and a beautiful berry— 
health of the canes, and the good bright red follows Sodus in season and is perhaps the largest of all 
colored berries make Sunrise the finest very Raspberries. 
early Red Raspberry. Especially desirable for Both Sodus and Marion thrive better in Southern 
the home garden because of the long fruiting States than other Raspberry varieties. They seem to 
season. Introduced 1939 by U. S. Dept. of Agr. hold up better under drouth and heat conditions. 
Sodus 
New Large Purple Raspberry 
Considered heaviest yielding of all 
Raspberries. 
Attractive, firm, sprightly and good 
quality. Picks easily and does not 
crumble. Plants are hardy, vigorous, 
very productive of heavy annual 
crops which ripen. shortly after. 
Latham. 
Heaviest Yielding—tTo our know)- 
edge Sodus is the heaviest yielding 
of all Raspberries and if picked at 
the right stage has attractive 
color which brings a _ high 
market price. 
Drouth Resistant —sodus 
withstands drouth, heat and 
other adverse weather condi- 
tions and comes through with 
a crop when most varieties of 
‘Raspberries fail. We highly 
recommend it as a berry for home planting, 
local markets; and for commercial canning 
we believe it will completely replace Co- 
lumbian, long the favorite. 
@ 
ia Marion ‘423,2/2" 
Very large, late purple Raspberry to follow Sod Raspber ries 
; r oNow Sodus in season of ripening. i 
apr wal in size thtoushout the Seton, modersay supe sueeRE The erie aro yey large, holding 
cling to the bushes but not so much as to be objectionable. The plants are vigorous, bear heavy crops, avo 
hardy and tend to resemble a red Raspberry in a i 
and possibly the largest of all raspberries Med ote enranee: Marion is the largest of all the purple Raspberries 
Prices—Red and Purple Raspberries, See pages 6 and 9. 
8 
