ULMACEAE. — CELTIS 269 
Sería; rudimenta gynaecei parva; pedicelli breves, flavo-tomentelli; flores 2 (v. 9) 
ad apicem ramulorum axillares, plerique bini v. terni, a c? vix diversi sed gynaeceo 
distincto normali ultra medium flavo-piloso instructi. 
Here may be mentioned also a specimen collected by myself in Yunnan, be- 
tween Yungning and Yung-peh-ting, near Lan-ti-cho, June 27, 1914 (No. 1667). 
In the pubescenee of the branchlets it resembles C. labilis, but the leaves are more 
glabrous and show a somewhat different nervation. Unfortunately my material 
comes from a sterile plant which had been nearly cut down. 
Celtis labilis is common on the margins of woods and in open country throughout 
western Hupeh and eastern Szech'uan from river-level up to 1300 m. altitude. 
It is a tree from 12 to 16 m. tall, with a straight trunk from 1 to 2 m. in girth, pale 
gray smooth bark, and relatively thin branches which form a neat, more or less 
oval crown. The species is easily recognized by the small fruit-bearing branchlets 
which drop off when the globose orange-colored fruits are ripe. It is in cultivation, 
but has not proved very hardy in this Arboretum. 
A picture of this tree will be found under No. 588 of the collection of my photo- 
graphs and also in my Vegetation of Western China, No. 159. E. H. W. 
Celtis Bungeana Blume, Mus. Bot. Lugd.-Bat. II. 71 (1852). — 
"d Planchon in De Candolle, Prodr. XVII. 171 (1873). — Franchet 
in Now. Arch. Mus. Paris, sér. 2, VII. 79 (Pl. David. I. 269) 
(1884). — Dippel, Handb. Laubholzk. II. 47 (1892). — Koehne, 
Deutsche Dendr. 137 (1893). — Hemsley in Jour. Linn. Soc. XXVI. 
449 (1894), exclud. No. 5735 Henryi.— E. Pritzel in Bot. Jahrb. XXIX. 
296 (1900). — Komarov in Act. Hort. Petrop. XXII. 90 (Fl. Mansh. 
IL) (1903). — Schneider, Ill. Handb. Laubholzk. Y. 229, fig. 147 q, 
148 q (1904). — Diels in Bot. Jahrb. XXXVI. Beibl. LXXXII. 33 
(1905). — Pampanini in Nuov. Giorn. Bot. Ital. n. ser. XVII. 253 
n. — Nakai in Jour. Coll. Sci. Tokyo, XXXI. 192 (Fl. Kor. IL) 
11). 
Celtis chinensis Bunge in Mém. Sav. Bir. Acad. Sci. St. Pétersbourg, Il. 135 
(Enum. Pl. Chin. Bor. 61) (non Persoon) (1833). 
~ Celtis sinensis Planchon in Ann. Sci. Nat. sér. 3, X. 286 (non Persoon) 
(1848).— Maximowiez in Bull. Acad. Sci. St. Pétersbourg, XVIII. 293 (1873), 
quoad specim. e China boreali; in Mél. Biol. IX. 27 (1873). — Baker & 
Moore in Jour. Linn. Soc. XVII. 386 (1879). — Hemsley in Jour. Linn. 
Soc. XXVI. 450 (1894), quoad specim. Henryi, No. 4214. — Diels in Bot. 
Jahrb. XXXVI. Beibl. LXXXII. 33 (1905). : 
Celtis Davidiana Carriére in Rev. Hort. 1868, 300. — Planchon in De Candolle, 
Prodr. XVII. 172 (1873). — André in Rev. Hort. 1894, 97. — Mouillefert, 
Traité Arb. Arbriss. II. 1210 (1898). — Schneider, Ill. Handb. Laubholzk. 
I. 228, fig. 147 k (1904). — Henry in Elwes & Henry, Trees Great Brit. & 
ul 929, t. 207, fig. 11 (1909). — Bean, Trees & Shrubs Brit. Isl.-I. 
1914). 
Celtis Mairei Léveillé in Fedde, Rep. Spec. Nov. XIII. 264 (1914). 
Western Hupeh: Fang Hsien, side of streams, rare, alt. 1200 
m., November 1907 (No. 595; tree 7-10 m. tall, girth 0.6-1.2 m., fruit 
