352 
sufficient to indicate here that ev erything of ordinary interest will 
be found in a reference to the illustrated works mentioned above; 
Parliamentary Returns, containing Copies of Correspondence re- 
lating to the Introduction of the Cinchona plant into India and the 
Proceedings connected with its cultivation (1) March 1852 to 
March 1863, pp. 1-272; (2) April 1863 to 1866, pp. 1-379; (3) 
April 1866 to 1870, pp. 1-285; (4) Aug. 1870 to July 1875, 
pp. 1-190, and (5) continued in a second part pp. 1-190; The 
Cinchona Planters’ Manual, Owen pp. 1-203 (Ferguson, 
CORYNANTHE, Welw. 
Corynanthe paniculata, Welw.; Fl. Trop. Afr. III. p. 43. 
Ill.—Trans. Linn. Soc. xxvii. t. 14. 
Vernac. names.—Anikiba (Benin, Dennett); Mangue (Golungo 
Alto, Welwitsch); Mangue do Monte or Paco de Golungo Alto 
(Portuguese, Welwitsch). 
Benin, Cameroons, Congo, Angola, etc. 
The-wood is good for building (F1. Trop. Afr. l.c.); used in 
house building and for many other purposes in Golungo Alto 
(Hiern, Cat. Welw. Afr. Pl. ii. p. 497); white, hard, durable, of 
fine grain and very dense (Le.). 
A large tree, Benin City (Dennett, Herb. Kew), 40-60 ft. high, 
trunk straight, 1-21 ft. in diam. near the base, forming exten- 
sive forests in nearly all the more elevated parts of Quilombo and 
Mata de Alto Queta, Angola (Hiern, Cat. Welw. Afr. Pl. ii. 
p. 497); a tree 25-40 ft. or a shrub 12-15 ft. high (Fl. Trop. 
Afr. Lo.). 
Cameroons, ‘ Endun " of the French Congo, is the source of the 
= Yohimbe bark," from which the alkaloid ‘‘ Yohimbine "' 18 
Johimberinde," by E. Gilg and K. Schumann, pp. 92-97, 
S. Nigeria Gazette, July 14, 1909, Su pa Report by Imp. 
geria.” 
CnossoPTERYx, Fenzl. 
Crossopteryx Kotschyana, Fenzl; Fl. Trop. Afr. III. p. 44. 
Ill.—Kotschy, Pl. Tinneana, tt. 15a and 15b; Notizbl. Bot. 
Gart. Berlin, App. xxii. 1909, p- 39, f. 15 (C. africana). 
