H. S. WILEY & SON. CAYUGA. N. Y. 
Sample 
Brandywine — Berries very large, regular, 
conical, never coxcombed; the heaviest, 
most firm and of very excellent quality. Its 
very large size, beauty of form and color, 
firmness and high quality -will make it a 
desirable variety for any purpose. 
Clyde — A new berry that is making a record 
wherever grown. Season early to medium. 
Perfect flower, berries large to medium, 
very firm, dark scarlet in color, fine flavor. 
Glen Mary — Berries large, bright deep red, 
rich, sweet and good. One of the most pro- 
ductive and holds its size well to the end. 
Medium to late. 
IViarshall — Color very dark rich crimson to 
the core, flesh fine grained and of a deli- 
cious flavor and with the peculiar aroma 
of the native wild strawberry. It is a 
remarkably fine keeper and carrier, which 
will commend it to all growers for the 
market. 
Nick Ohmer — Plant very large and stocky, 
vigorous and productive; fruit the very 
largest size, a giant among strawberries. 
It is never misshapen. Its only departure 
from the regular, roundish, conical form is 
when, under high culture, it is somewhat 
triangular. Dark glossy red, firm and of 
excellent flavor. 
William Belt — Berries large, conical, rather 
long, regular in outline; bright red, glossy; 
quality good, moderately firm. Plant vig- 
orous, healthy and quite prolific. 
ABDITIONAL VARIETIES. 
Beder Wood. 
Bubach No. 5 (P). 
Crescent (P). 
Corsican. 
Haverland. 
Jessie. 
Michel 's Early. 
Parker Earle. 
Sample (P). 
Senator Dtinlap. 
Sharpless. 
Warfield. Wilson. 
We were obliged to refuse a great many 
orders last Spring for strawberry plants 
because orders reached us so late. All orders 
for plants should reach us by April 1st. 
t®*Rcduced prices on .5,000 and 10,000 lots. 
BLACKBERRIES 
This excellent and profitable fruit should 
be planted for garden use in rows six feet 
apart, with plants four feet apart in the 
rows; for market, in rows eight feet apart, 
with plants three feet apart in the rows. 
Give the plants the same cultivation as Rasp- 
berries. If properly grown, and successive 
varieties are chosen, this fruit extends over 
a very considerable period, and affords a 
steady income for marketing. 
All following varieties, good, strong plants, 
75 cents per 12; $2.00 per 100, Mailed at the 
dozen price. 
Agawam — Ripens earlier than other kinds, 
and has a flavor similar and equal to the 
wild berry; perfectly hardy. 
Erie — A new variety from Northern Ohio; 
plant a vigorous grower; berry large, round. 
Eldorado — A new seedling from Ohio claimed 
to be the best all-round berry yet produced, 
combining nearly all the good qualities 
found in a blackberry. 
Eittatinuy — Large, black, sweet; soft when 
black; very hardy; ripens up gradually like 
the Lawton. One of the best. 
Rathbun — Origin Western New York. Bush 
perfectly healthy, vigorous, but not a high- 
growing sort, and very rarely suckers from 
the roots but propagates itself from tips 
like the black raspberry; fruit of largest 
size, highest quality, borne in wonderful 
profusion. 
Snyder — Extremely hardy; enormously pro- 
ductive; medium size; no hard sour core; 
half as many thorns as Kittatinny or Law- 
ton. 
Taylor's Prolific — It is so extremely hardy as 
to have stood 30 degrees below zero 
unharmed. Berries large and of the high- 
est quality. 
Wilson's Early — Very large size, oblong oval, 
black, quite firm, rich, sweet and good. 
Wilson's Junior — This is a noble variety, and 
continues to yield enormous crops of large 
fruit. Among its good qualities are size, 
earliness and productiveness. Its capacity 
for yielding is extraordinary. A little ten- 
der in some sections. 
