Scarff’s Registered Raspberries 
Grown by The Ohio Small Fruit Improvement Association 


Berrles such as these are produeed by 
Registered Plants 
® REGISTERED VARIETIES °@ 
LOG AN This is the most popular variety with 
the members of the Ohio Small Fruit 
Improvement Association. Several reasons for this 
ehoice are: 
(1) The inherent resistance of Logan to some of 
the deadly Virus diseases and its ability to stand ad- 
verse conditions in general. 
(2) Given good culture and an abundance of Nitro- 
gen fertilizer, Logan has proven more productive than 
Cumberland, a long time favorite. One of the Associa- 
tion growers states, ‘‘Our best yield from the New 
Logan Variety was 3700 quarts per acre. Cumberland 
under comparable conditions in the same planting that 
year yielded 2500 quarts per acre.” 
(3) The Logan crop is produced early and usually 
before the summer drouth conditions become critical. 
Every Commercial planting of Black Raspberries 
should include at least one-third to a half of the 
Logan variety. 
We have a very fine stock of Registered Logan 
plants this year. 
BRISTOL This variety is rapidly gaining fa- 
vor for both home and commercial 
planting because of its high quality fruit and wide 
adaptability of the plants. (For more complete 
description see page 7.) 
This variety has been 
CUMBERLAND the standard of ill 
Blackeap Raspberries for a long period of years and 
still is the choice of both the home and commercial 
growers who understand its weakness and keep their 
plantings in full vigor. The berries are large and of 
the very highest quality. 
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. 
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. 
Start right with the best stock obainable—Registered. 
Prices Registered Raspberries 
Registered plants available in Cumberland, Bristol, 
and Logan Blackcaps this year. 
(For variety descriptions, see pages 5, 6, and 7) 
7 By Express 
Postpaid Not Prepaid 
Prices per 25 50 100 500 1000 
$3.50 $6.00] $9.00 $35.00 $50.00 
3000 to 5000 lots—$45.00 per 1000 
5000 lots and up—$40.00 per 1000 

LOGAN BLACK CAP 
Highly Resistant to Mosaic and Other Virus Diseases 
Every grower of Black Cap Raspberries should have a good block of this Logan variety. It is the best early 
Black Cap grown in Ohio and yields as heavy a crop as any midseason variety. 
better than other Black Caps. 
Most Dependable 
Early Black Raspberry 
The Logan is not a new variety here 
in Ohio as it has been grown for a 
number of years in one of our largest 
commercial berry sections. Among these 
growers this variety 
through sheer merit has 
replaced other standard 
kinds until at present 
more than three-fourths 
of the plantings are New 
Logan. The berry ripens 
one week earlier than 
Cumberland; it is a heav- 
fer ylelder and the glossy 
black berries are as large 
as that variety. It holds 
well through drought and 
in fact the last picking has always 
proven as fresh and free from seedi- 
rae and tendency to crumble as the 
rst. 








It withstands dry, hot weather 
Highest Prices on 
Early Market 
One of the New Logan’s outstand- 
ing characteristics is its resistance 
to the more serious virus diseases of 
raspberries. It seems to outclass all 
other black cap varieties in 
this respect and this is one 
of the primary reasons why 
it has gained popularity 
among the growers who de- 
pend on black raspberries 
for their livelihood. 
5 The Raspberry plants of- 
fered on pages 5, 6 and 7 of 
this Catalog are State Cer- 
tified plants complying with 
the standards of inspection 
set up by the Central Plant Board and 
may be shipped anywhere in the U. S. 
(except certain counties in Oregon). 
