Xll 



Page 76, Soymida felrifuga. To vernacular names add " Suam, Uriya;" 



76. To numbers add 



"C3566. Khurdha Forests, Orissa . . . 71 Ibs." 



77, Chloroxylon Sicietenia. To vernacular names add " Sengel sail, K61 

 Bharhul, Kharwar ; Bhira, Gondi ; Bhirwa, Baigas ;" 



77. Below line 31 add " Molesworth in ' Graphic Diagrams for the Strength of 

 Teak Beams ' gives : Weight 60 Ibs., P = 950, E = 5,200." 



77, C. Swietenia. To numbers add Ibs. 



" C 3443. Seemah Reserve, Fallow ...... 



C 3572. Khurdha Forests, Orissa . . .57 

 D2926. Madras ......... " 



78, Cedrela Toona. To vernacular names add " Kujya, Tippera ; Somso, 



Bhutia; JZatangai, K61 ; Madagiri vembu, Madura;" 

 79, C. Toona. To numbers add Ibs. 



"C 3476. Saran da Forests, Chota Nagpore ..... 

 " C 3545. Khurdha Forests, Orissa ... 31 

 "E 3599. Sukna Forests, Darjeeling ... 39 

 " E 3619, Latpanchor, Darjeeling Hills, 4,000 ft ..... 

 " E 3623, Kalingpung, Darjeeling, 2,000 ft. . 35 

 (The last shews 11 rings on 7 inches radius or 1*6 rings per inch, 

 while No. E 3619 has 31 rings on a radius of 7|, or about 4 per inch, 

 and E 3599 shews 3| rings per inch.) " 



79. After the end of C. serrata, above the 6th line from the bottom of the 

 page, add 



" In the Monograph of the Meliacese published in 1878 by 

 Casimir de Candolle, the species of Cedrela formerly grouped under the 

 one head of Cedrela Toona, Roxb., have been separately described. 

 They are thus distinguished : 

 " Ovary glabrous 



" Leaflets petioled . . C. serrata, Eoyle. 



" Leaflets subsessile . . . C. glabrtt, C. de Cand. 



" Ovary hairy 



" Leaflets acute at the base . C. Toona, Roxb. 



" Leaflets round at the base . C. microcarpa, C. de Cand. 



" In the ' Trees, Shrubs and Climbers of the Darjeeling District," 

 three varieties were spoken of and separated as follows : 



" ' No. 1. Deciduous ; flowering March ; fruiting June ; bark grey- 

 brown, smooth, exfoliating; found in the plains on low land. 



" 'No. 2. Evergreen ; flowering October-November ; fruiting Feb- 

 ruary and March ; bark dark brown, rough, not exfoliating ; found 

 in the lower hills up to 4,000 ft. 



" ' No. 3, Evergreen ; flowering June ; fruiting November-Decem- 

 ber ; bark light reddish-brown, exfoliating in long flakes ; found 

 in the upper hills from 5,000 to 7,000 ft. and of great size.' 



" No, 1 is C. Toona, Roxb. ; No. 2 probably <?. microcarpa, C. 

 de Cand. ; No. 3, probably C. glabra, C. de Cand. It would, how- 

 ever, have probably been better to describe No. 1 as 'deciduous in 

 the cold season' and Nos. 2 and 3 as 'deciduous in the rains.' 

 There is perhaps a fifth species. 



" They may also be distinguished as follows by the capsule : 



Caps.e s m ooth 



Capsule covered with corky tubercles . C. glabni. 

 "Of the Northern Bonsai specimens which wo liavc 

 E 360 and E 2333 will be C.fflabra, while E 655, E 2332, E35D9, 



