FRUIT GARDEN DIS'P LAY ED. 32^ 



main, or in a nurfery for a year: inferting 

 tnciti-near a foQt inter-' thft ground^ they_Bdtt- 

 readiiv emit roots below, and fhoot llrongly 

 at top. 



Thofe defigncd for ftandards ^ould be 

 planted in any fituations above-mentioned, 

 ten to fifteen or twenty feet afunder, nnd^ 

 trained each with a hnglc (rem, three to four 

 or five feet high, thcJi to branch out above to 

 form fpreading heads, and advance nearly in 

 their natural order. ' 



And to plant them in the Redge order, the 

 cuttings may be inierted into the fides or 

 tops of banks or ditches. Sec. a foor ^lfunder, 

 and perntitted' to bra^ich out from the bottcm ; 

 cut in on the fides, it required to have the 

 hedge thick and fomewhat regular below ; 

 and may run up at icp in -ull growth, to pro- 

 duce large crops of berries. 



The trees may alio be ra^fe3 frbnf f^'ed'df 

 thd berries, ffjwe'a in Autuiiin or Spring, iit' 

 a bed or border, for planting out when ori^' 

 or two years old, iii the fcafons above iVs'elV 

 tioried, in a nUrfe/y, to traia for lin'AJ Cfah'fi'' 

 planting. ■ ., . „ . ". * . 



The beVrles"fip6h tfie ihiSSU or I itteP ^{i^- 

 of September, to gather for irftmediaie uf6';j 

 in which the beVrics are itrip^ed c'J the' 

 buiiches, and the juice thereof ex-preffed ; 

 then is prepared to a proper qualify, boiled, 

 fcuiriified, afferwafds is worked off with 2.^ 

 Jtftle'yeall, and then tuhned' o^'lJafreUeU up" 

 for ufe, as waujf^d*.''" ■ ' ''' 



F f T H 2 



