SEPTEMBER 23, 1910] LAURACEAE FROM Mr. Apo AND Mr. GrriNa. 
DEHAASIA Blm. 
Dehaasia triandra Merr. 
Field-note for 12221:—Erect tree, in damp rich soil of a 
forested flat near the Pauala river at 1000 feet; branches mostly 
at the top and forming a flat crown, freely rebranched, the 
twigs crooked and suberect; wood bitter and slightly fetid, 
soft, yellow, light; bark yellowish brown and gray on the 
branchlets, smoothish or lenticelled and scaling in very thin 
small plates; leaves submembranous, horizontal, recurved, 
shallowly folded on the upper side, dull dark green above, 
paler so beneath; young inflorescence suberect, green; fruits 
ellipsoid, 1 inch long, upon a deep bright red receptacle 
usually provided with few lenticels; the thick brown peduncle 
only an inch or few in length, sparingly branched. ‘‘Bulabog’’ 
is the Visayan name for the former number and ‘‘Betis” 
for the latter. 
Represented by numbers 12221 and 12201, Elmer, Magal- 
lanes (Mt. Giting-giting), Sibuyan, April, 1910. 
ENDIANDRA Brown 
Endiandra vidalii Elm. n. sp. 
Stunted tree; stem 10 m. high, 4 dm. thick, crooked, 
with the main branches arising from the middle; wood hard 
and heavy, without odor or taste, brownish toward the center; 
bark 15 mm. thick, hard, rigid and brittle, gray  mottled, 
densely lenticeiled, cinnamon brown beneath the epidermis; 
branchlets numerous, lax, yellowish gray and brown lenti- 
celled. Leaves usually horizontally spreading, alternate, 
scattered along the twigs, glabrous, coriaceous or subchar- 
taceous, shallowly folded upon the upper lucid green 
surface, subglaucous green beneath even in the dry long, 
state, tips acute to acuminate and recurved, entire, 13 cm. 
at least 4 cm. wide across the middle or a trifle below it, 
base obtusely rounded or abruptly acute and occasionally 
slightly inequilateral; midrib prominent and brown beneath, 
impressed along the upper side, with 6 to 9 pairs of oblique 
