Tawena Plum 
NE W Offerings 
of other 
HANSEN PLUMS 
WASTESA. Meaning “delicious” in Sioux Indian. Very 
large and of excellent quality, with marbled red and 
yellow skin. Almost free-stone. A heavy annual bearer, 
and worthy for its continued productiveness. One of the 
best for good eating and canning. 
TOKATA. Some consider Tokata the best in quality. 
Fruit large, with orange red skin and flesh. A perfect 
free-stone. Highly fragrant with a rich apricot flavor. It 
must be planted near heavy pollinators to produce an 
abundance of fruit. 
SANSOTO. Is a similar hybrid to Cheresoto. Of black 
color with a blue bloom. The flesh is green, cling, 
sprightly and pleasant. Grows like a vigorous plum tree 
but the season of blooming is later, assuring escape 
from late frosts. 
TOM THUMB CHERRY. This variety is very popular in 
Canada. They are fine to eat fresh and for canning, as 
they retain the shape of the whole fruit. The dwarf bush 
bends to the ground with its burden of sweet black 
cherries. 
Wastesa Plum 
TAWENA. Another sister of 
Waneta and Kahinta that appar¬ 
ently possesses the best points 
of both. In flavor a mixture of 
them, and in bearing an almost 
sure annual heavy cropper of 
large red plums. The tree is 
exceptionally sturdy, well 
branched. 
TECUMSEH. A hybrid combin¬ 
ing five species which seems to 
carry the good qualities of them 
all. Plums are extra large and 
of delicious flavor and wonderful 
quality for table use. They ripen 
very early. Not too hardy north 
of here. 
OZIYA. The earliest large 
plum. Outstanding for its large 
size and very bright red color. 
The flesh is light yellow and of 
dessert quality. Makes excellent 
jam of bright cherry color and 
superb flavor, and the skin cooks 
up and disappears. 
WINNIPEG. Bears a heavy annual crop of fruit of good size 
and quality. Both skin and flesh are sweet and juicy. Pre¬ 
serves well in jam and sauce. It ripens later and extends the 
plum season. Sturdy and hardy far into Canada. 
CHERESOTO. Fruit is oblong, black with a blue bloom. 
Green, cling flesh with sprightly pleasant taste and thin skin. 
Medium sized vigorous growing tree. Bears heavily. Shows 
promise as a late market plum. A cross of Sand Cherry and 
DeSoto. 
EZAPTAN. Remarkable for earliness and heavy bearing. 
Purple fruit with slight gray bloom. Quality delicious from 
skin to pit, same as Sapa, though perhaps it is a trifle smaller. 
Excellent for heavy production of pollen in mixed orchards. 
Perfectly hardy. 
SKUYA. In Sioux Indian, Skuya means “sweet.” This name 
was chosen because it so precisely describes the delicious 
fruit of excellent quality. The skin of the fruit is dark red and 
the flesh is yellow. The pit is very small. 
WOHANKA. Fruit is one-inch 
or more in diameter, round, dark 
red. Flesh green, red at pit. 
Flavor is pleasant, sprightly sub¬ 
acid. Pit is small round, nearly 
free. Skin very thin, free from 
acerbity. Tree very strong, vig¬ 
orous, stocky, spreading. 
ETOPA. Remarkable for its in¬ 
tense black, purple-red skin, flesh 
and juice. Excellent in quality. 
Of the same pedigree as Sapa, 
this hybrid plum resembles it 
very much, in habit of heavy 
crops and type of fruit. Ripens 
about midseason. 
CHAMPA CHERRY. The dry 
land champion. Fruit of good 
quality, sprightly, juicy, glossy 
black in color and with very 
small pits. Champa makes a 
strong upright bush five to six 
feet in height. It bears freely 
and annually even far north. 
Champa Cherry 
PRICES FOR HANSEN PLUMS ON THIS PAGE 
Each, 65c; 3 for $1.80; 6 for $3.50; 12 for $6.50. 
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COMBINATION OFFER 
1 Each of the Hansen Plums of¬ 
fered on this page, only $7.00. 
1 Each Kind, $7.00 
[ 16 ] 
