Chaulmoogra. — DIOECIA POLYANDRIA. $35 
natural number when all come to maturity. \ The berries are 
palatable and reckoned wholesome. 
4. T. sepiaria, Willd. iv. 831, R. Corom. pl. 1. N. 68. 
Shrubby. Thorns simple, leaf and flower-bearing. Leaves 
oblong, obtuse, serrate, smooth, Peduncles aR: 3 and ter- 
minal, Berries about five-seeded, - 
Sideroxylon spinosum, Willd, i. 1091. 
Teling. Kanroo. 
Courou-moelli, Rheed. Mal. v. t. 39. 
A small shrub, common on mncal Uaptes land, in vari- 
ous parts of India. 
6, T. sapida. Willd. iv. 830. R. Corom. pl. 1. N. 69. 
- Arboreous, Thorns axillary, simple. Leaves oval, serrate, 
smooth, Peduneles axillary, few-flowered. Berries from 
eight to ten-seeded, © 
es whinge Smedeo:Kontuke, 
ittelings Mein vont Digs ts 
A native of Coromandel and Bengal, though. adi no means 
so common as sepiaria. 
6. F, obcordaia, R ' 
Shrubby, armed. canes obcordate, crenate, Flowers 
terminal. Berries ten-seeded. 
. A native of Chittagong. 
CHA ULMOOGRA. R. 
Maz, Calyx from four to five-lobed. Corod P= 
led, with a nectarial scale under the base of each. Frmane, 
Calyx and corol as in the male. Germ superior, one-celled ; 
ove numerous on five parietal receptacles. Styles five, 
Berry dry, one-celled, many-seeded. Embryo furnished 
with a perisperm; direction of the radicle various, 
5A2 
