H. S. WILEY & SON, CAYUGA, N. Y. 
17 
BLACKBERRIES 
75 cents doz, $2.50 per 100, $17.50 per 1,000 unless otherwise noted 
MAILED AT DOZEN RATES 
MERSEREAU B. BERRY 
This excellent and proflta'ble fruit should 
be planted tor garden use in rows six feet 
apart, with plants four feet apart in the 
rows; tor market, in rows eight feet apart, 
with plants three feet apart in the rows. 
Agavvam — 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- 
Ihining nearly all the good qualities found 
in a iblackberry. 
Snyder — lExtremely hardy; enormously pro- 
ductive; not half as many thorns as Kit- 
tatinny or Lawton. A great market var- 
iety. 
Taylor's Prollflc — It is so extremely harly as 
to have stood 3'0 degrees below nero un- 
harmed. iBerries large and of the highest 
quality. 
TWE MERSEREAU BliAdaSiEiRRY. 
The Mersereaii — The Prince of all black- 
berries. $1.00 per dozen, $3.00 per 100. 
See cut. 
This variety has a peculiarity of a second 
bloom 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 Octotier, 1914, I picked from 
the few Mersereau Blactoberry plants pur- 
chased from you, three quarts of the most de- 
licious berries I ever ate. 
F. F. FBNN, 
Seneca Falls, N. Y. 
The Mersereau was named by Prof. Bailey of Cornell University, See Cornell Bul- 
letin, No. 99, August, '95. 
See Bulletins issued from iNew York State Experimental station at Geneva, N. Y. on 
this variety. 
