Thinning, Gathering, Keeping, and Marketing. 119 



compact contrivance for keeping pears is a series of drawers, occu- 

 pying one or both sides of an apartment. Unless the fruit-cellar 

 is a very dry one, these drawers should be in an unfreezing room 

 above. The size of the fruit-cellar may vary with the amount to be 

 kept. If the shelves are five feet wide, and a passage two and a 

 half feet wide extend around them, a width of ten feet would be 

 required for the whole apartment. The room may be of any desired 

 length. A double series of shelves would require a width of seven- 

 teen and a half feet. 



The accompanying figure (Fig. 162) represents the plan of a sim- 



SHFlVESfor FR (JIT 



I 

 I 



Fig. 162. 



pie fruit-room, with shelves, five feet wide in the centre, three in 

 number, one above the other, supported by six posts, with a passage 

 two and a half or three feet wide all around. Fig. 163 represents a 



REAR DRAWERS 

 Jl II " ' J- 



I 



SHELVES 



PASSAC 



[DRAWERS 

 il || 



'EAR [DRAWERS 



Fig. 163. 



larger fruit-room, with two series of shelves, and a row of drawers 

 for pears on each side. 



Keeping Grapes. The great leading requisite for keeping grapes 



