11? 



THE BEST KIXDS OF FRUIT TREES 

 IN GENERAL. 



TO pretend to enumel'ate all the dif- 

 ferent kinds of apples grown for the 

 pnrj)oses of cider, would be a task no 

 less useless tlian diificult, for from descrip- 

 tion alone no one could make them out, 

 their number is immense, as every dis- 

 trict has some one favourite fruit for that 

 purpose, but in general the cider is made 

 of many sorts, mixed indiscriminately to- 

 gether. As the attention of the growers 

 of fruit has lately been called up by the 

 spirited exertions of T. A. Knight, Esq. 

 both in his exertions in forwarding the 

 publication of Pomona Herefordiensis, as 

 well as by his labour and attention to 

 this particular in his place as president 

 of the Horticultural Society of London, 



