HIGHEST QUALITY 
B Fe i S T O L WIDELY ADAPTED 
@ Best Variety for Home Planting. Thrifty in Growth—vVery Productive. e 
The first step in successful fruit culture is to 
secure strong disease-free plants. 
BRISTOL is an excellent quality berry, large, 
glossy and attractive. The bushes 
are hardy, vigorous and bear very heavy crops of the 
most delicious fruits. Although a comparatively new 
variety, Bristol has already taken a high ranking 


BRISTOL Has Rapidly Gained Popularity as 
The Best Midseason § Blackcap. 
It has proven to be very thrifty in growth and most 
productive and the very highest quality of all Black- 
cap varieties. We have found it to be widely adapted 
and producing heavy crops even in the semi south and 
place among the best of the Blackcap Raspberries for 
southwest where heat and leaf spot are ruinous to 
both home and commercial planting. 
other kinds. 
PRICES—-BLACK RASPBERRY STATE CERTIFIED PLANTS 
; Postpaid By Express Not Prepaid 
Strong | yr. plants Prices Per (2 25 50 100 200 500 1000 
Morrison — Bristol ......... exstites pieuasnteree $2.00 $3.50 $6.00 $9.00 $16.85 $35.00 $50.00 
Cumberland — Logan .............. eisees 1270 2.75 4.60 7.50 14.50 29.00 42.50 
3000 to 5000 lots—10% less than thousand rate. 5000 lots an up—15% less than thousand rate. 
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. It withstands dry, hot weather 
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 heavier 
yielder 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 seediness and tendency 
to crumble as the first. 
— Early Planting is Best 
All Raspberries prefer a good well drained loam soil high in fertility and the be 
when plenty of fertilizer, high in Nitrogen, is supplied. Plant early in the spring just as soon as you would 
Plant your early onions in the garden. Here in central Ohio this is the first of April. Prepare the ground 
carefully and in planting be sure to firm the earth well around the roots with loose soil over the growing buds, 
so that the plant sets just a little deeper than it was in the nursery row. Cut the old woody canes off at the 
surface of the ground. The average planting distance for all Raspberries is 3 feet apart in 6 foot rows. Do not 
permit the soil to bake or crust around the plants at any time. A mulch of good clean straw is desirable to 
hold a good even supply of moisture. 
All Raspberries thrive best in loose, well-drained loam soils which contain an abundance of humus. Old 
Bluegrass and Alfalfa sods, if plowed under a full year in advance of berry planting, provide an ideal soil 
condition. 


Highest Prices on 
Early Market 
One of the New Logan’s outstanding char- 
acteristics 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 rea- 
sons why it has gained popularity among the 
growers who depend on black raspberries for 
their livelihood. - 
st fruits are produced only 
4 
