40 SEEDS AND PLANTS IMPORTED. 



47629 to 47830— Continued. 



green on both surfaces. The wood is white, shining, hard, and close 

 grained, (.\dapted from Watt, Dictionaiy of the Economic Products of 

 India, vol. 1, p. 70.) 



47632. Acer thomsoni Miquel. Aceracese. Maple. 

 A large tree, often 150 feet in height, found in the hills of Sikkim and 



Bhutan, India, at an altitude of 4,000 feet. The thick, coarse, 3-lobed 

 leaves are a foot or more in length, and the wood is grayish white, soft, 

 and very brittle. (Adapted from Watt, Dictionary of the Economic 

 Products of India,, vol. 1, p. 11.) 



47633. AcTiNiDiA STRiGOSA Hook. f. and Thorns. Dilleniacese. 



A shrubby climber, native to Sikkim, India, with white flowers In 

 axillary cymes and edible, ovoid, mucilaginous fruits a little more than 

 an inch in length. (Adapted from Hooker, Flora of British India, vol. 

 1, p. 286.) 



47634. Trichosporum bracteatum (Wall.) Kuntze. Gesneriacese. 

 (Aeschynanthus bracteata Wall.) 



An epiphytic shrubby plant, native to the temperate regions of the 

 Himalayas at altitudes of 2,000 to 8,000 feet. The narrow, fleshy leaves 

 are about 4 inches in length and the scarlet flowers are over an inch long. 

 (Adapted from Hooker, Flora of British India, vol. Jf., p. 3^2.) 



47635. Alntjs nepalensis D. Don. Betulaceae. Alder. 

 A tall, sparsely branched, deciduous tree with dark-green bark which 



becomes brown and fissured with age. The bark is used in tanning and 

 dyeing and is said to enter into the composition of native red inks. The 

 wood is soft, close, and even grained, and is used for tea boxes. The 

 tree grows rapidly, and in Nepal, where it is native, it thrives on the 

 damp, uncultivatable banks of rocky streams and river beds. (Adapted 

 from Watt, Dictionary of the Economic Products of India, vol. 1, p. 176.) 



47636. AxpiNiA allughas (Retz.) Roscoe. Zinziberaceae. 



A common plant in low, moist places in eastern India. It has polished, 

 lanceolate leaves and large, numerous flowers of a beautiful rose color. 

 The aromatic rhizomes are used by the Indians medicinally. (Adapted 

 from Watt, Dictionary of the Economic Products of India, vol. 1, p. 192, 

 and Firminger, Manual of Gardening for India, p. 557.) 



47637. Amebimnon sissoo (Roxb.) Kuntze. Fabaceae. 

 {Dalbergia sissoo Roxb.) 



" The timber is very valuable and is one of the numerous kinds which 

 are known in the timber trade as rosewood. The heartwood is brown- 

 ish, and it possesses great strength and elasticity. It is also heavy, its 

 weight being about 50 pounds to the cubic foot. The wood is used for 

 all kinds of joinery and cabinetwork, carving, building material, gun 

 carriages, etc. It requires a tropical or subtropical temperature." 

 {Gardeners' Chronicle, 3d ser., vol. 55, p. 82.) 



47638. Anemone eivthlakis Buch.-Ham. Ranunculacese. 



A woody ornamental plant from 1 to 3 feet in height, with the 3-parted 

 basal leaves up to 6 inches in diameter, and white or bluish flowers, 1 to 

 1^ inches long, in compound cymes. It is a native of temperate regions 

 in India and Ceylon above 5,000 feet altitude. (Adapted from Hooker, 

 Flora of British India, vol. 1, p. 9.) 



