7 
Leaves soft and velvety, or with white felt, or cotton, or 
white silky hairs on the under surface. 
Leaves lobed, or doubly toothed (i.e. with large teeth MAP +4 
having smaller teeth upon them). 
Leaves dull-green, very soft and velvety ; flowers 
[ large, purple. ¥ 
e = 
Pop’ulus al’ba. White Poplar. 
lh Y 
Leaves entire, or simply toothed. AT ote 
Leaves roundish-oval, blunt (or minutely pointed) ; @ 
petals 5; (Great Orme’s Head). } 
: Cotoneas'ter vulgaris. 
Leaves distinctly pointed, or narrow ; flowers cage 
spicuous, in catkins. J BN.’ 
\Leaves not felted, or cottony, or silky. ie 
Leaves roundish or triangular, the stalk almost as long EEZs 
as the leaf and flattened near where it joins it, as 
if pinched from side to side. SD 
Pop’ulus. Poplar. 
Leaf-stalk round, or flattened from front to back. 
Small, low shrubs, wiry, or with green, furrowed Q 
twigs, with pinkish bell-shaped or s-lobed | rn! 
flowers. 
BRicacEm! 0S 
Erect shrubs or trees; flowers not bell-shaped. 
Leaves not more than } inch wide, (no stipules). 
aie needle-like, tufted, united in pairs by a 
sheath ; fruit a fir-cone. } 
L Pinus sylvestris. Scotch Fir. 
Leaves not in tufts of united pairs. 
ghia on the slender branches minute, 
| closely overlapping each other. 
4 Tam’arix gallica. Zamarisk. 
Leaves on the branches 3 inch long or more, 
mostly turned so as to lie in two opposite 
ranks. 
L Lavate'ra arbo'rea. 77ee pais. 
Leaves whitish beneath; flowers not purple. 
Leaves with sharply toothed lobes; flowers with 
[ 5 white petals. } 
‘ Py'rus. 
Lobes entire or bluntly toothed; flowers a 
in catkins. 
J 
) 
Salix. Willow. 
Tax'us bacca'ta. Yew. 
Leaves (mostly) + inch wide or more. 
