FROM UPPER BURMA AND THE SHAN STATES. 25 
DESCRIPTION OF PLATE III. 
A branch of Hypericum pachyphyllum, Coll. et Hemsl., natural size. 
Fig. 1, a petal from a bud ; 2, a bundle of stamens; 3, back and front views of 
anther ; 4, pistil; 5, cross section of ovary. All enlarged. 
TERNSTREMIACER. 
Anneslea fragrans, Wall.; Fl. Brit. Ind.i. p. 280; Forest FI. 
Burma, i. p. 98.—Shan hills at 3000 to 5000 feet. 
Martaban and Tenasserim. 
Actinidia callosa, Lindl.; Fl. Brit. Ind. i. p. 286.—Shan hills 
at 5000 feet. 
Temperate Himalaya, from Garhwal eastward, and extending to 
China and Japan. 
Saurauja Roxburghii, Wall.; Fl. Brit. Ind. i. p. 287; Forest 
Fl. Burma, i p. 103.—Shan hills terai at 3000 feet. 
Eastern India. 
Schima Wallichii, Choisy; Fl. Brit. Ind. i.p. 289; Forest FI. 
Burma, i. p. 106; syn. S. mollis, Dyer; Fl. Brit. Ind. i. p. 288. 
—Shan hills at 5000 feet ; common on hills at 3000 to 4000 feet, 
Aplin. 
Eastern India, Malay peninsula, and Sumatra. 
DIPTEROCARPEE. 
Shorea siamensis, Mig.; Fl. Brit. Ind. i. p. 304; syn. Pen- 
tacme siamensis, Kurz, Forest Fl. Burma, i. p. 119.—Shan hills 
terai at 2000 feet; one of the commonest trees in the Shan 
States, Aplin. 
Malay peninsula. 
Hopea ? n. sp.; specimen floriferum tantum adest.—Shan hills 
terai at 2000 feet. 
Flowers very sweet-scented and often worn by Shan girls in 
their hair. 
This is very near Hopea argentea, Pierre, in foliage ; but the 
leaves are yellowish beneath instead of silvery. Still, in the 
absence of fruit, we are not sure of the genus. 
