. Annual report of the New York State College of Agriculture at Cornell University and the Agricultural Experiment Station. New York State College of Agriculture; Cornell University. Agricultural Experiment Station; Agriculture -- New York (State). 932 Rural School Leaflet of which a fluid (with properties approaching those of gastric juice) is secreted. The tube is hairy within, with downward-pointing, stiff hairs. The single nodding flowers are borne on a leafless or nearly leafless stem, arising from an underground part of the plant. The flower has five sepals and five petals. This plant be


. Annual report of the New York State College of Agriculture at Cornell University and the Agricultural Experiment Station. New York State College of Agriculture; Cornell University. Agricultural Experiment Station; Agriculture -- New York (State). 932 Rural School Leaflet of which a fluid (with properties approaching those of gastric juice) is secreted. The tube is hairy within, with downward-pointing, stiff hairs. The single nodding flowers are borne on a leafless or nearly leafless stem, arising from an underground part of the plant. The flower has five sepals and five petals. This plant belongs to the pitcher plant family and has but few near kin. In bogs of Virginia and southward there is a flower called " trumpet," which is the only relative of the pitcher plant in our part of the country. The willow.— The willows are trees or shrubs that have buds with a single scale. The leaves are mostly long and pointed, 1^ entire or glandular-toothed. Usually the branches are very slender. The willows are dioecious, that is, the staminate flowers are borne on one tree and the pistillate iwers on another. As many as 51 different species are Usted certain botanical works. A few of the more common willows are as follows: Basket willow, or osier, the twigs of which are used for basketwork. It has lance-linear, entire, slender-pointed leaves, 3 to 6 inches long and satiny white underneath. The black willow has a rough bark and narrow-lanceolate, taper-pointed leaves, often downy when young, green and smooth when older, except the short petiole and midrib. It ?grows on the banks of streams and lakes. The crack willow, or brittle willow, has smooth leaves from the first, green on both sides or only slightly paler beneath. The tree is tall and slender. The twigs are very brittle at the base, easily breaking away and growing into new plants when set in the ground. This tree is planted for shade and ornament. The weeping willow is a large tree with rough gray bark and s


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