BH. ED 
narrowing? gradually to four or five t top, having a | gael 
or ftage fixed at every feven or sak feet of height, 
one near the to ach havin _ rail waift- 
fort of ladder Ferwned on one 
this machine a man or tw 
or platform, trimming t ake hedge with { rb 
with alight garden hedge bill, get ina rs £9 
to five or fix feet long, more expeditions, mn 
. itis 
it may 
forts of = a 
In extenfive pleafure-grounds and wae thefe edtines are’ 
Tu en neceflary-in various intent 
DGE- fener’ a term ga 8 that ‘fort which confifts of 
foot ‘end of hedge. See ‘2 
qw, aterm deno 
h Greif | numbers of trees in ree ftate 
fet met with in particular diftricts, 
to continue in 
avoided.» 
ns as ibe from the pre of ftock yt ea 
the fame time have his hedges in neat order. 
er feafon for thé : performance of work of this 
e during ihe winter months, when t ftate 
mit— 
perly done; while in t 
the plants from the “iiag of the fap in 
od prattice to have the bidiges of farms. 
a ina — Song as foon as poflib 
hey being afterwards 
Ne ie er 
wt abears 
- dfter the ten: 
y 
condi tion with —_ er aie’ op facility. 
7" great 
-s of executing this 
8, they can be | dineBted! by the nature 
=i It aly however, be a i to avoid 
ble all forts of dead hedges, as not 
the 
pO! ¢ of living and no plath- 
sag cman in edge 9 
OL. 
: igh is e 
vf Dug 
- of the lower clafs live, commonly thro 
' tous 
HE Z. 
ae sis sg #6 they confequently laft much tonger thaw 
d 
where mu matters are made ufe fin them ; and: 
form a far rte sa rn againft live floc 
y get o 
d other wood fhould likewife be fag 
pe away, in the view of being placed in proper ftacks 
near the farmftead, and thus the field be left free from all 
forts of rubbifof that nature. S ENCE. 
ADIE, in Geography, a town of Afiatic Turkey, 
in the Semen? of Dia wee; on the Ti ae is ; 35 miles’ 
of Tecrit. N. lat. 60° 
otted, weds 
Be y emen, e W. by the Arabic gulf. From 
the fea-fhore, a phn, saying in breadth, ftretches back- 
wards to the bottom of achain of mountains, iy ih in a’ 
dire€tion Sealia ‘ ihe Red Sia. This-plain is faedy and 
arren, with the exception of the openings of Oe vallies, wa- 
tered by torrents from the mountains. This barren plain can- 
not be populous. Jambo, Jidda, and Ghunfude are the only 
d or or harbours on the whole of this extenfive coaft. The 
er villages interf{perfed here and there ar are too few and too 
rnooniidersble to deternd notice, 
can bring into the field 2000 men. 
His domains contain rae, cities and a number of villages.- 
the months favourable for pafturage the moft diftin- 
guifhe perfons of this tribe live in tents ; and in the other 
parts of the year, they inhabit towns and villages. Thofe’ 
ugh the whole year, 
in huts thatched with grafs. This ROE ECE" is fituated - 
upon the mountains between Mecca an The 
other independent ee in this: province ‘live ah their 
fubjeéts m towns and villages, through the whole "year," 
and ord their defence ones ome caitles built upon precipi- 
They fometimes join their neighbours to attack 
the "Turkith som aD! but thefe never sts aC, their dc» 
minions. The chief of the tribe of Ha sah 
principally hara fies the caravans, and lay colons under contri-: 
bution. The mott remarkable a ce Known ¥ thefe hig! - 
] mae Bip is that which th 
are 
and Kheibar.”? Thefe Jews do not feem to ke eep “i any inter= 
er Afia. 
courfe with their brethren who are difperfed 
They belong — feét of the Karaites, who are not nume= 
uch feattered ; and by the other Jews, who* 
Sieechiit on the feet of. ie Pharifees, are ftill 
chia than the Chriftians o r Mahometans 
The graud fignior ftyles —— foreteign of Hedjan and and 
3 
