866 LEAFLETS OF PHILIPPINE BOTANY [Vor. III, Arr. 48 
and glandular fruits and is much less pubescent in the ip- 
florescent branches. The petioles in ours are also shorter, 
the average lamina is maller, differently shaped and covered 
with a different indument. Also similar to, yet specifically 
distinct from C. arborea Roxb. and C. maingaya King and 
Gamb. 
Callicarpa erioclona Schauer. 
Field-note:—Lax shrub; stem 1 inch thick, 9 feet high, 
laxly branched from below the middle; wood odorless and 
tasteless, pale white, rather hard; bark yellowish especially 
beneath the smootbish epidermis; leaves submembranous, diverse 
in size, horizontally spreading, flat or only slightly recurved, 
smooth and deep green on the upper side, yellowish glau- 
cescent beneath; young infrutescence erect, green, with globose 
berries. In dry fertile soil along a wooded ridge bordering 
the Baracatan creek at 1250 feet. The Bagobos call it 
'*Cagong.?? 
Represented by number 11190, Elmer, Todaya (Mt. Apo), 
Mindanao, July, 1909. 
THe EscoLTA Press, INC. 
