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Fig. 17. 



doing as I have directed above, a Pear-tree may be 

 reclaimed, renovated, and made to bear well. 



As soon as the cut-back tree, 

 Fig. 18, has made one year's <N. H f*J 



growth, as in Fig. 19, lift ^^j 

 it, and then it will pass into the *g= ^^t s^*- 

 state of Fig. 20, when it should =^sss=JtgL 

 be lifted every alternate year, Fig. 18. 



and the spurs nipped in all 

 through the summer, when an abundance of fruit spurs 



Fie:. 19. 



will be found, as in Fig. 21, which example is a fair 



