. Botany for young people and common schools : how plants grow, a simple introduction to structural botany : with a popular flora, or an arrangement and description of common plants both wild and cultivated : illustrated by 500 wood engravings . Botany. all the sooner makes veg- etable matter enough to fqrm'a third pair of leaves and raise them on a third joint of stem (as in Fig. 31) ; and so it goes on, step by step. This nour- ishment in the embryo of the Eed-Maple seed was a few weeks before in the trunk of the mother tree, as a sweet sap, that is, as Meipk-sugar. 37. Variations of the Pla
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. Botany for young people and common schools : how plants grow, a simple introduction to structural botany : with a popular flora, or an arrangement and description of common plants both wild and cultivated : illustrated by 500 wood engravings . Botany. all the sooner makes veg- etable matter enough to fqrm'a third pair of leaves and raise them on a third joint of stem (as in Fig. 31) ; and so it goes on, step by step. This nour- ishment in the embryo of the Eed-Maple seed was a few weeks before in the trunk of the mother tree, as a sweet sap, that is, as Meipk-sugar. 37. Variations of the Plan of Growth. In the Moming-Glory, after the pair of seed-leaves, only one leaf is found upon each joint of stem (see Fig. 23 and 4). In the Maple there is a pair of leaves to every joint of stem, as long as it grows. In the Morning-Glory the food in the seed, for the' growth to begin with, was stored up outside of the emhnfo; in the Maple it was stored up in it, that is, in its seed-leaves. The plan is evidently the same in both; but there are diffei--. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Gray, Asa, 1810-1888. New York : Ivison, Phinney & Company ; Chicago : S. C. Griggs & Company