Plants of the Punjab. ieee 
TREES WITH ALTERNATE. ExsTIPULATE COMPOUND LEAVES. 
Averrhoa Carambola, 
Khamrak. 
GERANIACER. 
He Be 1 489: 
The Plains. 
Averrhoa Bilimbi, 
Bilumbi. 
GERANIACES. 
Bobb. 1.409. 
The Plains. 
Murraya exotica, 
Murraya Keenigii, 
Gandalu, gandanim. 
RutTacEeé. 
Be ilisas 508. 
The Plains to 5,000 ft. 
- Limonia acidissima, 
Feronia Elephantum, 
Elephant or Wood 
apple, 
Bilin, kat-bel. 
RUTACER. 
Pebook, ole, 
The Plains to 1,500 ft. 
rurgaon. 
Rohtak. 
PETALS UNUNITED. 
long-stalked, stamens many on a short column sur- 
rounding a long thread with ovary above ; fruit a many- 
seeded, ovoid, berry, 1-2 in. diam., rind rough with white 
dots, seeds + in. long, nearly smooth, kidney-shaped, 
black in pulp. The bark is an antipyretic and sedative, 
the fresh leaves are rubefacient and vesicant. 
small; leaves pinnate with a terminal leaflet, leaf 
stalk stout, velvety, leaflets 2-5 pairs, ovate, 13-3 in. 
long, smooth, long-pointed ; flowers small, variegated, 
white and purple, sepals and petals 5 of each, stamens 
10; fruit yellow, fleshy, 38 in. long, oblong, acutely 4-5 
ridged, edible, seeds 2-5 in each cell, each seed surround- 
ed by a fleshy appendage (aril). Cultivated. 
small, same as the last, but leaflets 5-12 pairs, 
oblong, velvety beneath, fruit with rounded lobes and 
seeds without the fleshy appendage. Cultivated. 
see Shrubs, Alternate, Exstipulate, Compound. 
small, strong scented tree with brown bark, 
usually velvety or woolly ; leaves 6-12 in. long, leaflets 
9-25, 1-14 in. long, alternate ; flowers 3 in. long, white, 
in terminal flat-topped branching racemes, sepals 5, 
petals 5, dotted, stamens 10; fruit ovoid, } in. diam.. 
black, wrinkled, seeds embedded in a gummy substance. 
The leaves are stomachic and used to flavour curries. 
see Shrubs, Alternate, Exstipulate, Compound. 
medium size, spinous, bark blackish-grey, wrinkled 
and with shallow longitudinal furrows ; leaves smelling 
of aniseed, with an odd number of leaflets, leaflets 
5-7, opposite toothed, gland dotted; flowers 4 in. 
diam., reddish-green in loose clusters, calyx 5-tooth- 
ed, soon falling off, petals 4-5, stamens 10-12; fruit 
with woody rind, round, grey, rough, 24 in. diam., 
edible, seeds oblong, buried in pulp. ‘This tree is often 
found shrubby on the sides of roads. The gum is used, 
the fruit eaten and is usefvl in dysentery. 
