The tree blossoms at the same time as other standard 
varieties and is apparently hardier in the bud than the 
average sweet Cherry. The fruits are an attractive me' 
dium dark red similar to Windsor, the standard variety 
which it most nearly resembles, and the quality is excel' 
lent for eating fresh and for canning. 
It is a remarkable fact that the original tree, which 
now stands about 30 feet high and approximately the 
same measurement across, has produced a crop year 
after year, even as high as 15 bushels as it did in 1932, 
with practically all fruits sound and perfect in every 
way, no worms, rot or leaf spot, without ever having 
been sprayed. 
There is no previous record in the history of Horti- 
culture of a falbbearing Cherry until the accidental dis- 
Sweet 
September 
The Amazing 
New Fall 
Bearing 
Cherry 
U, S. Plant Patent No. 94 
Produces deliciously sweet 
bright red Cherries which 
ripen from about September 
1st until the snow flies. Ap' 
parently free from rot, leaf 
spot and curculio injury. 
The young trees start to 
yield some fruit the second or 
third year after planting and 
produce heavy annual crops 
thereafter. 
covery by an amateur horticulturist in northeastern 
Ohio of this sweet Cherry tree which for some unknown 
reason ripened its fruits in September instead of June. 
Here is a fruit that every home owner should have 
in his dooryard to extend the season for sweet Cherries 
through the late summer and autumn. It will find ready 
sale on the roadside market and at a time when the 
market season is at its height and the fruits can be sold 
over a long period of time as they do not rot but hang 
on the tree until picked. 
PRICES ON SWEET SEPTEMBER CHERRY 
(Plant Patent No. 94) 
lto9 10to49 50ormore 
trees trees trees 
3 to 4 ft.#1.50 #1.45 #1.40 
4 to 6 ft. 2.50 2.25 2.00 
Hansen Bush Cherries 
( The New Quick 
Bearing Cherry — 
Easy to Grow — 
Positive Production. 
This new Cherry, which is the result 
of nearly forty years of hybridizing by 
Prof. N. E. Hansen of the South Da¬ 
kota State College promises to bring 
quicker and greater profits to the Com¬ 
mercial Cherry growers. Large quanti- 
ties of choice fruit can be produced on 
a very small area of ground. 
Though the fruit of this Bush Cherry 
closely resembles a plum in size and 
shape, it comes in clusters, and some¬ 
times completely covers the limbs. It 
is large sized fruit, good flavor, and 
it is excellent for eating fresh, for jams 
and jellies, and it makes a splendid 
cordial. 
The bush or tree grows in a dwarf 
bush-like shape, rarely getting over five 
or six feet tall. It branches and bears 
from the ground up, and it bears the 
year after planting, and often the same 
year the tree is planted, and annually 
thereafter. They should be planted three 
to four feet apart in rows and the 
rows should be five to six feet apart. 
The plant is hardy in South Dakota, 
so it should certainly be entirely hardy 
here in the East. The bush is sturdy 
and disease-resistant. 
PRICES ON HANSEN’S 
BUSH CHERRY 
50 or 
lto9 10 to 49 more 
t fPPC ffopc ffppc 
2-ye. plants, 12-24". #0.50 #0.40 #0.25 
The above photograph shows Prof. N. E. Hansen of Brookings, South Dakota, with 
branches of the Bush Cherry in fruit. Note the large number of cherries on each branch. 
[ 13 ] 
