H. 6. WILEY & SON, CAYUCBA, N. Y. 
IS 
BLACKBERRIES 
Jl.OO per dozen, $2.00 per lO'O, ex cept as noted. Mailed at dozen rates. 
MERSEREAU B. BERRY 
This excellent and profitable fruit should 
be planted for garden use in rows six feet 
apart, with plants tour feet apart in the 
rows; for market, in rows eight feet apart, 
with plants three feet apart in the rows. 
.\gawam — Ripens earlier than other kinds, 
and has a flavor similar and equal to the 
wild berry; perfectly hardy. 
Eldorado — A new seedling from Ohio com- 
bining nearly all the good qualities 
found in a blackberry. $3.00 per 100. 
Snyder — Extremely hardy; enormously 
productive; not half as many thorns as 
Kittatinny or Lawton. A great market 
variety. 
Taylor's Prolific — It is so extremely hardy 
as to have stood 30 degrees below zero 
unharmed. Berries larae and of the 
highest quality. 
The Mersereau was named by Prof. 
Bulletin, No. 99, Aug<ust, '95. 
See Bulletins issued from New York 
on this variety. 
VHK MBRSBREAU BIjAOKBERKV. 
The .^lersereaii — The Prince of all black- 
berries. $1.00 per dozen, $2.50 per 100 
See cut. 
This variety has a peculiarity of a sec- 
ond bloo.m period after the full or first 
crop is gathered. It produces, in some 
cases, all through September and well into 
October. 
Read the following: 
Messrs. Wiley & Son; 
It may interest you to know that the 
last week in October, 1914, I picked from 
the few Mersereau blackberry plants pur- 
chased from you, three quarts of the most 
(Iplicious berries I ever ate. 
F. F. F®NN. 
Seneca Falls, N. Y. 
Bailey of Cornell University. See Cornell 
State Experimental station at Geneva, N. Y. 
