which gives particulars of the shipments of Hankow 
wood oil 
during the year 1905 :— 
- 
i 
I 
1 
I 
(llj j 1 
f 
- 
g 
% 
J 
PCs. 
Pels. 
Pels. Pels. 
Pel, 
Pota. 
Pels. 
Pels. 
Pels. 
PeK 
1VK 
January .. 
170 
181 
450 - 
288 
- 
5,219 
82 
- 
- 
- 
February 
- 
- 
- 
83 
- 
1,511 
- 
- 
- 
- 
March .. .. 
- 
- 
- | - 
85 
- 
- 
127 
- 
- 
- 
April .. . 
- 
- 
- 
- 
- 
urn 
- - 
- 
- 
May .. .. 
318 
- 
171 - 
88 
- 
6,412 
167 - 
- ! - 
June .. .. 
m 
345 
169 101 
- 
H 
6,163 
- I ~ 
- | - 
July .. .. 
1,963 
- 
2,861 
- 
- 
- 
7.132 
441 
- 
88 - 
August .. .. 
yw 
- 
un 
- 
1,(135 
- 
4,009 
94 
- 
- 
M 
September .. 
3,5i>4 
- 
2,825 
- 
2,211 
278 
1,540 
- 
- 
- 
- 
October .. .. 
1,013 
- 
1,102 
168 
1,772 
83 
vm 
- 
- 
- 
- 
November 
1,521 
- 
1,182 
- 
i,m 
174 
tfW 
- 
- 
- 
- 
December . 
606 
- 
168 
- 
\** 
253 
3,308 
- ! 420 
" 
!2,5, 
526 
"" 
m 
8,521 
s72 
(9,514 
-F 
" 
" 
Under the name of Balucanat or Balucanag a sample of an oil 
seed from the Philippines imported into Liverpool was received 
at the Museum in 1891. Subsequently, in 1897, what appears 
to be the same thing came into the London market, said to h t\ , 
been shipped from Hong Kong. These are both b« 
be derived from Aleurites I 
Philippines. 
Blanco, a native of the 
J. M. H. 
Revision of the Synonymy op the Species of Aleurites. 
Much confusion prevails in botanical literature as regards the 
apnlication of the names of the species of Aleurites. This is 
largely due to the fact that the common Chinese species, the 
T'un°- Yu or Wood Oil Tree, has hitherto been erroneously 
regarded as identical with the species, Aleurites cordata R. Br., 
originally described by Thunberg as Dryandra cordata. Another 
source of error, but of a different kind, has been the assumption, 
especially by earlier writers, that Dryandra cordata Thunb 
and Vernicia montana. Lour., which are m reality identical, were 
