' < HYBRID CHERRIES 
- • ■ I ; V- -• ■■ ■ ■ _ 
Hybrid Cherries 
Bear Fruit 
The First Year 
After Planting 
PRICES—ALL HYBRID CHERRIES except 
NEW MORDENA 
Size Each Per 5 Per 10 Per 25 
3- 4 ft. 30c $1.25 $2.30 $5.00 
4- 5 ft. 35c 1.50 2.80 6.25 
*5-6 ft. 40c 1.75 3.30 7.50 
* Only Starred Varieties can be secured in 5 to 6 
ft. Size. 
* COMPASS CHERRY —The most productive 
of the hardy, annual bearing Hybrid Cherries. 
It bears quality fruit about an inch in diameter 
the year after planting. Compass Cherry 
trees bear heavily even in the dryer and more 
severe climates of the Prairie States. The fruit 
is good eaten fresh or canned. If you want to be 
sure of fruit— plant Several Compass Cherry 
Trees. Red, sweet, juicy, and a very fine flavor. 
A few 6-8 ft. Compass available at 45c ea. 
NICOLLET CHERRY—A Pie or Sour Cherry 
for the North. Introduced from Minnesota in 
1925, Nicollet has grown in favor as an excellent 
substitute for the standard sour cherries. A 
dark red cherry almost an inch in diameter, 
Nicollet is juicy, yellow flesh, and an early 
bearer. It is also a good pollenizer for Zumbra, 
Compass and Morden. 
NEW! NEV/! NEW! 
MORDENA PLUM-CHERRY— The fruit is 
dark purple and is large, meaty, sweet, dark in 
color. Its flavor is rich, pleasingly sweet carry¬ 
ing a touch of the cherry. Free stone. Mordena 
is one of the really good fruits from the Morden, 
Manitoba, Canada Experiment Station. Buy at 
least three for $1. 25. Not more than three to a 
customer. Prices: 50c each; 3 for $1.25. 
"YOUR GARDEN" SPECIAL 
One Each of Six Choice Cherries - 3 to 4 ft. 
Including 
New Mordena 
M.50 
Compass Cherry 
PROF. HANSEN’S 
IMPROVED 
SAND CHERRY 
Wonderful improvement over the common na¬ 
tive sand cherry of western South Dakota. Some¬ 
thing that is worth while in every garden. The 
fruit is larger and of excellent quality. Should 
be grown in bush form. Makes an excellent 
division hedge between the garden and yard. 
Produces fruit the first year after planting. 
2 year, 18 to 24 in., 12c each; 5 for 55c; 
10 for $1.00; 50 for $4.50. 2 to 3 ft., 20c each; 
10 for $1.50. 
Sweet and Sour 
Che rries 
That Are Hardy 
in the North 
* QKA —A Fine Black Sweet 
Cherry —OKA 
In my opinion. Oka does not need to “take its 
hat off” to any cherry, sweet, sour, or hybrid. 
Oka has a sweet flavor that’s hard to beat. It’s 
outside color is black and its flesh dark purplish- 
red. It is juicy and free stone. Oka is excellent 
as a canning fruit, but unless you have a lot of 
trees, the fruit will never see the inside of a can. 
It’s too good eaten fresh from the tree. You can 
leave them to dry on the trees if you wish, and 
use them like prunes. Hardy well up into Mani¬ 
toba, Canada. Oka is a good producer of quality 
fruit in the South, North, East, or West. Plant 
enough! You can get Ten Oka Trees for only 
$2.30. 
TOM THUMB —One of Professor Hansen's 
BUSH CHERRIES, and one of the best bearing 
hybrid Cherries. It covers its branches with 
lovely flowers in the spring and these are fol¬ 
lowed by enormous numbers of dark juicy fruits. 
It grows bushy and gets about two feet tall. 
Tom Thumb bears fruit a year after planting— 
in quantities. Its bluish-black skin and red 
juicy flesh makes Tom Thumb an attractive 
Cherry. Good eaten fresh or canned. It is.one 
of the most dependable hardy cherries. Border 
your garden with a row of Torq Thumb. You 
can get ten plants for $2.30. 
* ZUMBRA CHERRY—A good late Hybrid 
Cherry introduced by the Minnesota Fruit 
Breeding Farm in 1920. It is a 3 way cross of a 
Black Sweet Cherry, Pie Cherry, and Sand 
Cherry, and produces a heavy annual crop of 
fruit about an inch in diameter. The plant is 
small and should be grown as a bush. Fruit, dark 
reddish-black with yellowish-green flesh. Zumbra 
is also a good pollenizer for other Cherry 
Hybrids. 
NEW VARIETIES OF BUSH CHERRIES 
INTRODUCED BY PROF. N. E. HANSEN-BROOKINGS-S.D. 
THESE VARIETIES NEVER OFFERED BEFORE 
"GRAFTED" TREES-NOT SEEDLINGS 
These BUSH CHERRIES are a valuable addition to the fruit list of the 
North. Perfectly hardy and beautiful in flower. They also produce great 
quantities of excellent fruit. They bear the year after planting. Buy early 
—Supply limited. 
HANSEN NEW BUSH CHERRIES—Price—Each 85c; Per 3—$2.40; Per 
5—$3.75. One Each of Nine Varieties—$5.95. 
KEYAPAHA—Fruit very large, quality very good, sweet. Pit small. 
Fairly free-stone. 
OAHE—Fruit good quality; very productive; low open habit. Pit oval, 
very small. 
OKREEK — Fruit large, round with minute prickle, sweet, quality excellent. 
Equal to Sioux in quality and of better habit. Good bearer. 
TEPEE—One of the Sioux seedlings. Heavy bearer. Very good quality. 
Medium large pit. Habit upright and spreading. 
WAMPUM—Upright open habit, 4 feet. Excellent quality. Very heavy 
crop. 
WASTA—Fruit medium sized, round; quality very good. Very heavy crop. 
Upright, Open, spreading habit. Pit small, round. 
WATAUGA—Fruit large. Quality good. Pit small. Heavy bearer. Habit 
upright spreading. 
WETA—Fruit large and round, quality very good. Pit small. 
WEWELA—Fruit medium size, good quality, very heavy crop. Pit small. 
Habit low. 
ORDER ONE.EACH O F T HE NINE CHERR IES; No One Knows Which Is Best/They Are All Good; NINE TREES S 5-95 
Bush Cherries and Hybrid Cherries bear fruit the year after planting 
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