. Bountiful Ridge Nurseries : your guide to better fruits and more beautiful homes for 1937. Nurseries (Horticulture) Catalogs; Fruit Catalogs; Fruit trees Catalogs; Trees Catalogs; Asparagus Catalogs. CHIEF RASPBERRY NEW LOGAN RASPBERRY. NEW LOGAN A Leader and the Most Dependable Early Black Raspberry One of the New Logan's outstanding characteristics is its resist- ance to mosaic and other raspberry diseases. It seems to outclass all other black raspberry varieties in this respect, and this is one of the primary reasons why it is gaining popularity among the growers who depend on black raspb


. Bountiful Ridge Nurseries : your guide to better fruits and more beautiful homes for 1937. Nurseries (Horticulture) Catalogs; Fruit Catalogs; Fruit trees Catalogs; Trees Catalogs; Asparagus Catalogs. CHIEF RASPBERRY NEW LOGAN RASPBERRY. NEW LOGAN A Leader and the Most Dependable Early Black Raspberry One of the New Logan's outstanding characteristics is its resist- ance to mosaic and other raspberry diseases. It seems to outclass all other black raspberry varieties in this respect, and this is one of the primary reasons why it is gaining popularity among the growers who depend on black raspberries for their livelihood. 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. Another good feature of the New Logan is that it ripens its crop quickly and does not string out over a period of time, thus mak- ing picking much easier. A thrifty grower, and, although not as upright as Cumberland, our growers find this no objection if the summer shoots are top- ped higher than normal. Prices, No. 1 Tips—90c for 25; § for 100; $ for 500; $ for 1000. BLACK BEAUTY NEWBURG An unusual thrifty and disease resistant seedling Black Raspberry which originated on the farm of Ross Cowen, Green County, Ohio, where it has been grown as a commercial variety for several years. This splen- did variety was introduced by a prominent Ohio Nur- seryman spring of 1932. It surely is a step forward in producing mid-season black Raspberries and gives prom- ise of replacing to a degree the Cumberland which has been the standby for years. It is a very thrifty grower and should be planted about 5 ft. apart. You will find it hardier than Cumberland and equally as productive as the best Cumberlands. The berries are large, firm, black, with very little greyish bloom


Size: 1334px × 1873px
Photo credit: © Library Book Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggilbertnurseryandseedtradecata, bookcentury1900