200 LEAFLETS OF PHILIPPINE BOTANY [ Vor. I, Arr. 8 
Reinw., but with larger differently shaped receptacles which 
are never solitary or in pairs from leaf axils or from the 
axils of their scars. Named for Mr. G. W. Satterthwaite, a 
teacher in Leyte. 
20. F. cassidyana n. sp.—An erect small tree 6 m. 
high, with spreading branches; wood very soft, white; bark 
of the two or three year old branches conspicuously grayish 
white and smooth; young bark light brown, covered with 
reddish brown setose hairs which mostly arise from minute 
conical papillae. Leaves several at the ends of the twigs, 
much spreading, dry, membranous, equally harsh on both 
sides, dark green above, lighter beneath, upper surface 
cinereous pubescent especially along the nerves, lower surface 
covered with a short soft brown pubescence, very unequal 
in size, average ones 2 dm. long by 1 dm. wide just above 
the middle, apex abruptly tapering into an acuminate point, 
sides usually equilateral, base broadly cordate, broadly and 
obscurely pandurate, margins finely serrate or obscurely tooth- 
ed; primary nerves 5 to 7 pairs, ascending, prominent be- 
neath; petiole 1 to 3 cm. long or even longer, hispidly 
brown pubescent, stout; bud scales 15 mm. long, acuminate, 
pubescent. 
Receptacles hispidly brown pubescent, upon 12 mm. long 
peduncles of short branched numerously bracteate tubercles 
of the stem, subtended by 3  membranous bracts, about 5 
em. in diameter when mature, obovoid, the base slightly 
tapering toward the 1 cm. long peduncles, apex broad and 
deeply sunken; syconium densely covered with long bristle 
like hairs of unequal lengths; either rudimentary or neutral 
- flowers enveloped by the inner series of the umbilical scales; 
immature fertile female flowers 3 mm. long; its pedicels 
from 0.5 mm. to 1 mm. long, glabrous, falsely articulate 
at about the middle, dark brown above the articulation, 
paler below this; ovary glabrous, obovoid, subcompressed, 0.5 
mm. long in the receptacles; perianth inserted upon the ar- 
ticulation, apex truncate or in the young specimens 3 to 5 
sharply toothed and tightly subtending the base of the ovary; 
style filiform, sublateral, usually curved, the stigmatic por- 
tion subclavate and lanose pubescent, otherwise glabrous. 
