. Cyclopedia of farm crops : a popular survey of crops and crop-making methods in the United States and Canada. Agriculture -- Canada; Agriculture -- United States; Farm produce -- Canada; Farm produce -- United States. Fig. 17 or male flower above; pistillate or female beneath. Tlie seed-pod or ovary is shown at B; at A there is none. wood; new xylem tissues are i^led on the outward side. The ;hloem grows old and dies; the dead parts are added to the bark ; new phloem tissues are added on the inward side. The fibers of hemp and flax are derived from the phloem. In monocotyledonou


. Cyclopedia of farm crops : a popular survey of crops and crop-making methods in the United States and Canada. Agriculture -- Canada; Agriculture -- United States; Farm produce -- Canada; Farm produce -- United States. Fig. 17 or male flower above; pistillate or female beneath. Tlie seed-pod or ovary is shown at B; at A there is none. wood; new xylem tissues are i^led on the outward side. The ;hloem grows old and dies; the dead parts are added to the bark ; new phloem tissues are added on the inward side. The fibers of hemp and flax are derived from the phloem. In monocotyledonous plants, as grasses, sedges, orchids, bananas, ly-like plants, there ^./ â ±i/ / / â -^^. V)^- \\^^ Fig. 16. A daisy or white weed, one of the com positae. Very many palms and all flowers compose tlie , i n -ii i head, the outer ones are vascular bundles with xylem each bearing one long and phloem regions, but the bun- petal or ray. dies are scattered through the''"â ~* .., yi stem and therefore do not form an exterior ring, and .//^i^^s \s^\ ]j ^. there is no true pith. Moreover, these bundles do not >-;i contain cambium, and therefore, the stem does not increase much in thickness and does not have a distinct separating bark (Fig. 22). The fibro-vascular bundles are Fig. 18. Separated sexes in black walnut. The stam- very evident in the stem of Indian corn, and can be pulled out. There are some commercial fibers produced by plants of the dicotyledonous kind. Manila hemp is from a species of banana, and sisal hemp, from an agave, one of the century plant group; these fibers are derived from the entire bundle, both xylem and phloem, and this origin probably accounts for their stiffness and hardness and their resistance to abrasion. inateflowers (in clusters called catkins) at B; pistil- late flowers, each with two stigmas, at Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability -


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