862 LEAFLETS OF PHILIPPINE BOTANY [Vor. III, Arr. 48 
covered with glistening glands, strict, averaging 7.5 cm. in 
length, toward the top bearing a few bracts; the paniculate 
corymb 1 dm. wide; all the branches grayish tomentose, 
subtended by bracts, only sparsely sprinkled with glands; 
flowers sessily clustered at the ends of the ultimate branchlets, 
the fascicles subtended by inequal spatulate bracteoles, the 
individual flowers subtended by circles of short straw-colored 
hairs; calyx cup-shaped, 1.5 mm. high, nearly as wide 
across the top, on the outside of the rim beset with numerous 
light colored glands, otherwise short stellately pubescent, 
subtruneate or obscurely dentate; corolla whitish, glabrous 
and eglandular except on the outside of the lobes, 3 mm. 
long, the basal one half united, the 5 segments broadly 
oblong or subelliptic; stamens well exerted, glabrous, the 
slender filaments attached to the base of the corolla tube; 
anthers 1 mm. long, ovately ellipsoid, bilobed and basifixed; 
style equalling the stamens, glabrous, thickened toward the 
apex, terminated by a suboblique and obscurely lobed disk- 
like stigma; ovary densely covered with light yellow glands; 
fruits subglobose, 3 mm. iu diameter at most, subtended by 
the cyathiform calyx, glandular, with 4 achene-like seeds, 
turning reddish. 
Type specimen 11491, A. D. E. Elmer, Todaya (Mt. Apo), 
District of Davao, Mindanao, August, 1909. 
In moist earth of very deep sandstone cuts along the 
Seriban creek at 5750 feet, below Baclayan the highest mount 
Apo camping place. The Bagobos call it '*Lay-au-pan." Very 
rare! 
Its general appearance at once place it near C. subalbida 
Elm., but there are distinct vegetative differences besides 
minor characters in the flowers and fruits. Ours from Apo 
is a fine erect tree. 
Callicarpa caudata Max. 
Field-note:—Shrub 12 feet high; stem round, 1.5 inch 
thick, laxly branched; twigs yellowish gray, tomentose; 
bark smooth, of the same color; the wood odorless and 
without taste, soft, greenish white, with a large pith; leaves 
limp, descending, green above, yellowish or the stalks greenish, 
