ose. Indeed 

 may appear 

 shapes T" 

 roses, will li 



IV Con 1 

 take plu II 

 usuallj th 

 otherwise (s 

 Dudlej ) 



The above 

 tions but 111 

 plants tn 111 

 all kind 

 sible M 

 eluciditiii 



though m 111 

 been based 



The 



genertl u 



lowing M 



TERATOLOGY 



all p'lrts of the flower even to the ovules 

 IS green leaves of more or li ss irregular 



this ( itf,orv belong the so tailed green 



II H t nil )iiimon 



1 I \ I 111! actual union of parts ma> 

 I III III (t their development though 

 ij I a nr \in\* us are to be explained quite 

 ee t lout I p 592), also Fig 2489 (aftei 



TESTUDINARIA 



include onh the i 



common m-ilfoima 



ill s, nsitiveness of 



, _i ,T pltstlcltj 



1 with the 



h niologies 



th m sound, have 



* J 'W 



2488 Transformation of organs in a tulip flower, 



shell, containing m edible meat \sia but wideh 

 BM -iOO-t— Cult m South Floiid i L setui both 

 street tiee and for its Albert t1 \ u 1 nut Ihc 

 Ale e it( n either law or ro ist 1 I li is usi 



lost 



r^^^ 



"Eler 



\^,/4i 



^holB hteiature to d ite 

 i Reid Barnes 



blown skin or covering of tht i t is 

 / ( ritrippa IS sometimes cilled ( )li' 

 The tiee is extensivelv planted in Porto 

 nuts are called ' almonds 



TEKNSTEfEMIA (Christopher Tern 



naturalist, tiaveled m China, died 174 



(Here About 25 species of tendei evei 



shrubs mostlv native of tinpieal \m i 



Vsia and the Ml Alt' 



TEEMINALIA 



Combtetif • \i 



sometimes 

 branches g 

 ance The 

 green . r h 

 feet or I 

 tubuHi II 



g to the leaves 



It ii 1 iiiinus of the shoot) 

 I n 1\ mo trees or shrubs 

 ["•siti le ives which are 

 ded it the tops of the 

 ' them a whorled appear 

 31 s are small and sessile n 

 lioiiii iiiDsih 111 l(jng spikes 



t 11 lemoved 



I irk Tree ' 



CO, where the 



L H B 



petals 



irv the uppei 

 "j Igbed , sta 

 I long stvle 

 1 winged nut 



iig I Urge 

 often uhble 

 Termiiialiis are troj i 

 tal pUnts chieflv ot 

 the OldW Olid One of 

 them r Catapjiii is 

 wideh cultivated in 

 tropical countries Two 

 other names have ap 

 peared in the American 

 trade T eleqans 



Poll 



Id T 



to the writei 

 ■his very likeh 

 to belong to some othei 

 genus 



Catippa.Linn Trop 

 ICIL Alviond Deme 



R4RA ALMOSD MTRO 



B\LAN Fig 2490 Tall 



deciduous tree (some 



SO ft.), with 



long: spikes solitary from the axils. ,.,1 ,.x,., 1 

 leaves: fls. greenish white, the upper ones s 

 and the lower ones perfect: fr. almond-shaped 

 or less long, 2-edged, indehiscent, glabrous, wit 



ovary 2-3 loculed, loculfs 

 2 ovuled fr indehiscent TIio 

 following species is offered by im 



of Japanese plants 

 Japfinica, Thunb {Cteyeia Ja 

 nonua Thunb ) Sm ill tree or 

 shrub, 30-12 ft high h s dtu 

 nate short stalked luiin ,.li. \ it. 

 oblong oroblong, ^1 ilii 11 t. iili. 1 

 veined fls clustpie.l 1 11 it s li < ui 



tll( S17H ,,1 I„ ,s I ,| ,1, 



s / 1 bi ^^ VI 



Tins rdli. 1 sl„,v\\ „„l 



hiubs UI 1 ti 1 11 



Japan and China 

 The Ternsticemia giows 

 well in light, iKh soil 

 and attains fin dlv the h diit of a small bushy tree 

 The young leaves have a reddish color, which changes 

 to a dark glossy green when reichmg then full size 

 My plmts rused fiom se. d 111 tlu ^u . iilit.iis, .„d 



summer In pool so 

 lowish hue hut as soon as they have received their 

 share of bone or cottonseed meal thej ch uige to a fane 

 deep green. H. Nehkling. 



TERRACE. Consult Landscape Gardening. 



TESTUDINARIA (name explained below). DioscorA- 

 crit. The Hottentot's Bread. T"i;-"t.isF I'l tvTor Ele- 

 phant's Foot, is a curious 8tmi !■ in iiinit with a 

 great globular yam-like bulb "i i- li some- 



times attains a diameter of 1 

 hundred pounds. Half of tlii- 

 ground and looks something like 

 whence the generic name Testui 

 name "Elephant's Foot " refers to 



.I...L lies above 

 laek (tt a tortoise, 

 ■ia. The popular 

 ancouth and mas- 



