The tree book : A popular guide to a knowledge of the trees of North America and to their uses and cultivation . \ / i. A. Seed cases detached from axis „ THE TULIP TREE (Liriodendron Tulipifera) The tree frame is one of unusual symmetry and stateliness, the columnar trunk extending far into the crown. The wintertwigs end in flattened buds, enclosed in a pair of stipules. The conical fruits, made up of flat-winged seed cases attached to ?central spike, persist over winter, and are gradually loosened by the wind The Magnolias and the Tulip Tree Campbells magnolia (M. Campbelli) is at once the m


The tree book : A popular guide to a knowledge of the trees of North America and to their uses and cultivation . \ / i. A. Seed cases detached from axis „ THE TULIP TREE (Liriodendron Tulipifera) The tree frame is one of unusual symmetry and stateliness, the columnar trunk extending far into the crown. The wintertwigs end in flattened buds, enclosed in a pair of stipules. The conical fruits, made up of flat-winged seed cases attached to ?central spike, persist over winter, and are gradually loosened by the wind The Magnolias and the Tulip Tree Campbells magnolia (M. Campbelli) is at once the mostbeautiful and the most difficult of cultivation of all our tenderexotic species. It is the glory of the high mountain valleys ofthe Himalayas, where at very high altitudes it is a great in this country it cannot endure cold winters, and even in theextreme South it does not grow as it does at home. However,it is a splendid magnolia, and some day we hope to seeit—a tree 80 to 100 feet high—covered, before the leavesappear, with its rosy bells. It is, or should be, to theSouthern States what the Sou


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjecttrees, bookyear1920