REGISTERED DISEASE-FREE RASPBERRIES 
Grown by The Ohio Small Fruit improvement Association 
The first step in successful fruit 
culture is to secure strong, 
disease-free plants. 
What Are Registered 
Plants? 
Registered Raspberry plants are extraordinarily 
free from disease; they are strong and vigorous and 
true to name. They are grown only by the Ohio 
Small Fruit Improvement Association. Registered 
plants are produced under regulations which allow 
not more than one per cent of virus disease and not 
more than one-fourth per cent of galled plants in the 
parent plantings. 
Time for Planting 
The proper time to plant raspberries is in the very 
early spring while the plants are still dormant. This 
is early April in Central Ohio. We appreciate early 
orders, which enable us to make shipment at the 
proper season. 
Look for this 
SEALb^ 
Each bundle of 2.'> 
plants carries one 
of these linen tags. 
It guarantees sat¬ 
isfaction. 
REGISTERED 
STOCK 
l» 8MI§ SMIll FROn 
MPuniMEiii himm 
Price of Registered Cumber¬ 
land and New Logan which are 
the only varieties available this 
year. 
(For variety descriptions see pages 5 and R.) 
Cumberland 
No. of plants New Logan 
25 postpaid .$ 
60 to 300 per 100. 3.(M) 
300 to 1000 per 100. 
1000 plants . 20.<K) 
2000 plants per 1000. IS.OO 
3000 or more per 1000. IG.OO 
Registered Stock Is Disease-free, the tip plants 
are strong and vigorous, and true to name. Why 
take chances when you can get registered plants 
—plants with a history just as a registered ani¬ 
mal or grain. 
Registered Plants Kept 
Grower in Business 
W. W. Trowbridge, Painesville, Ohio, says, "In 
1929 1 was ready to quit raising blackcaps and 
was actually looking for some crop to take their 
place. Then I bought my first Registered plants. 
Now after 7 years with Registered plants, I feel 
that by providing proper isolation from other 
brambles and frequent, thorough roguelng of di¬ 
seased plants, if they appear, I can keep a rasp¬ 
berry planting in a profitable condition for as long 
a time as I can keep the soil in condition to grow 
a crop. Jly oldest plantmg set In 1931 is still 
92 per cent of a full stand. My yield In 1935 on 
4.1 acres averaged 83.7 bushels i)er acre. A bad 
wind storm just before harvest caused the loss 
of an estimated additional 16 bushels per ac*e." 
A fine young patch of Blackcaps Interplanted in 
a Block of Peach. 
THE PLANTING OF REGISTERED 
DISEASE-FREE RASPBERRY 
PLANTS INSURES 
1. Better stands. 
2. Better yields. 
3. Long lived plantations. 
4. Larger and better flavored fruit. 
5. More profits. 
6. Satisfaction. 
What Registered Plants 
Will Do 
Given proper isolation from outside disease sources 
and proper cultural care. Registered plants will pro¬ 
duce for you a healthy, high yielding, profitable rasp¬ 
berry plantation for a long period of years. Losses 
from the virus diseases and from gall will be negli¬ 
gible. Yield records taken in many plantings from 
registered and unregistered stock have proved this. 
Look at the yield records. Various Ohio Experiment 
Station publications and those of other states em¬ 
phasize the value of setting only disease-free plants. 
Start right with the best stock obtainable— -Reg¬ 
istered. 
7 
