The New Quick Bearing 
Cherry 
Easy To Grow 
Positive Production 
Plant Th ese Hansen Bush 
Cherries Because: 
1— They are easy to grow and perfectly 
hardy. 
2— Good to eat fresh and make delicious 
preserves. 
3— Bear early, heavy, and annually. 
4— Are dwarf growing, bushy, need little 
room. 
5— Are excellent for hedges or ornamental 
shrubs. 
Beautiful in Spring Flower 
Masses of Fruit Completely 
Cover the Branches 
50 or 
PRICES OF HANSEN BUSH CHERRIES 
1 to 9 
10 to 49 
more 
trees 
trees 
trees 
2-yr. plants, 18-24 inches. 
. ..$0.50 
$0.40 
$0.30 
HAHSEN-BushCherr 
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 fruit is slightly tart, although it cannot be classed as sour, and is 
medium to dark red in color. 
The bush or tree grows in a dwarf bushlike 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 an¬ 
nually 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. 
The New Extra Hardy 
Manchurian 
Apricot 
Put them on your "must" list. Particularly outstanding 
because of their ability to thrive and bear fruit almost 
anywhere in the U. S. A., thus extending the present 
Apricot belt to the Canadian border and even beyond. 
Have withstood temperatures of 50 below zero. Very 
drought resistant. They bear early, almost always in 
one or two years after planting. Fruit is of good size, 
freestone, good flavor. Strong one-year trees, 50c each; 
$4.50 per 10. 
Sweet 
September 
Cherry 
(Plant Pat. No. 94) 
The amazing new fall-bearing 
Cherry. Produces deliciously sweet 
cherries, medium dark red, large size 
fruit, which ripen about September 
1st. The young trees start bearing the 
second or third year after planting, 
and continue producing heavy crops 
thereafter. Strong, 3-4 ft. trees, $1.40 
each; $13.50 per 10. 
[15] 
