BUDS 89 
the leaf with the stem (Latin azilla, armpit). But not infre- 
quently there are several buds grouped in some way about 
a single leaf-axil, either one above the other, as in the 
butternut (Fig. 51), or grouped side by side, as in the red 
maple, the cherry, and the 
box-elder (Fig. 50). 
In these cases all the 
buds except the axillary 
one are called accessory or 
supernumerary buds. 
109. Leaf-Buds and 
Flower-Buds; the Bud an 
Undeveloped Branch. — 
Such buds as the student 
has so far examined for 
himself are not large 
enough to show in the most 
obvious way the relation Fie. 50. Accessory Buds of Box- 
of the parts and their real Ber (Negundo). (Magnified.) 
nature. A, front view of group; B, two 
The cabbage, however, is eee 
a gigantic terminal bud which illustrates perfectly the struc- 
ture of buds in general. 
Examine and sketch a rather small, firm cabbage, preferably a red 
one, which has been split lengthwise through the center and note: 
(a) The short, thick, conical stem ending in layers of rapidly 
dividing cells, the growing apex, the source of new leaves, and length- 
ening of the stem. 
(6) The crowded leaves which arise from the stem, the lower and 
outer ones largest and most mature, the upper and innermost ones 
the smallest of the series. 
(c) The axillary buds found in the angles made by some leaves 
with the stem. 
