ENCYCLOPHDIA OF GARDENING. 
GREENHOUSE SPECIES: T. azureum, blue, green, and white, Oct., 3 ft., 
tuberous-rooted, Chili; Jarrattii, orange, scarlet, and brown, June, 12 ft., tuberous- 
rooted, Santiago; lobbianum, orange scarlet, summer and winter, 6 to 10 ft., 
Colombia; pentaphyllum, vermilion and purple, summer, 4 ft., tuberous-rooted, 
Buenos Ayres; tricolorum, orange scarlet, summer, 5 to 10 ft., Chili. 
HARDY PERENNIAL SPECIES: T. Leichtlinii, orange, yellow and red, summer, 
trailing, hybrid; polyphyllum (Yellow Rock Indian Cress), yellow, June, trailing, 
Chili; tuberosum, yellow and red, Sept., trailing, tuberous-rooted, Peru; speciosum 
(Flame Flower), crimson, summer, 10 ft., Chili. 4 ? 
Trumpet-flower.—sSee Tecoma & Bignonia. _ 
Trumpet Honeysuckle (Lonicera sempervirens). — See 
Lonicera. : 
Trumpet Leaf (Sarracenia purpurea).—See Sarracenia. 
Trumpet Lily (Lilium longiflorum & Richardia africana).—See 
Lilium & Richardia. r i 
Tsuga.—oOrd. Conifer. Hardy evergreen coniferous trees. Habit 
of growth handsome and elegant. First introduced 1736. : 
CULTURE: Soil, deep, rich loam. Position, elevated, well-drained 
sites in parks or pleasure grounds. Plant in autumn. Propagate by 
seeds sown in sandy soil outdoors in April, or in pans in gentle warmth 
in March. 
SPECIES CULTIVATED: T. canadensis (Syn. Abies canadensis), Hemlock 
Spruce, 60 to 80 ft., N.E. America; caroliniana, 50 to 60 ft., 8. Alleghanies; mer- 
tensiana (Syn. Abies albertiana), 100 to 140 ft., N.W. America; pattoniana (Cali- 
fornian Hemlock Spruce), 100 to 150 ft., California; Sieboldii (Japanese Hemlock 
Spruce), 80 to 100 ft., Japan. 
Tuberose (Polianthes tuberosa).—See Polianthus. 
Tube-tongue (Salpiglossis sinuata).—See Salpigtossis. 
Tufted Pansy.—See Viola. 
Tulip.—See Tulipa. 
Tulipa (Tulip).—Ord. Liliacee. Hardy bulbous-rooted plants. 
CLASSIFICATION OF FLORISTS’ TULIPS: Seedlings: Bulbs that 
have not flowered. Breeders or Selfs: Seedlings or offsets from bulbs 
that have flowered & promise to develop into a good strain of one of 
the following classes. Broken: Breeder tulips developing stripes of 
another colour. Feathered: Having a light, heavy, or irregular dark- 
coloured edge to the petals. Flamed: having a dark candle-flame- 
like spot in the centre of each petal. Bizarres: Yellow petals marked 
with another colour. Byblomens: White, marked with shades of 
black, violet, or purple. Roses: White, marked with red. 
CLASSIFICATION OF ORDINARY TULIPS: Early: Flowering in 
March. Example, Due Van Thol. Late or Cottage: Flowering in 
May & June. Example, T. vitellina. Mother: Same as Breeders, 
self-coloured. _ Darwin: A superior strain of self-coloured tulips. 
Rembrandt: Same as Darwins, but striped. Parrot: Curiously- 
coloured blooms with large, feathery-edged petals. 
CULTURE OF ORDINARY TULIPS: Soil, light, ordinary, pre- 
viously liberally enriched with well-decayed manure. Position, sunny 
well-drained beds or borders. Plant bulbs 4in. deep & Gin. apart, 
Oct. to Dec. Mulch surface of bed with decayed manure or cocoanut- 
fibre refuse. Lift bulbs directly after flowering & replant them in 
sunny reserve border to finish their growth; or leave until July, 
then lift, dry, & store away in cool place till planting time. Bulbs 
may be left in ground altogether if desired, lifting, dividing, & re- 
planting every three years. Mother, Darwin, Rembrandt, & Parrot 
tulips grown in the same way. 
POT CULTURE: Compost, two parts loam, one part decayed 
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