190 RUTACER. [ Murraya. 
glabrous ; berries oblong shinee nearly an in. long, one-seeded, 
— succulent 
—Chittagong; a small variety of it not unfrequent in the low, especiall 
the Tis, and in the dry forests of the Prome District.—Fl. March; Fr. R.S.—. 
—SS.—= Aren.,; Lat., CaS. 
MURRAYA, L. 
Calyx more or less 5-cleft. Petals 5, imbricate. Stamens 10, 
— alternately shorter ; 3 the filaments linear-subulate ; anthers 
aah vell; darioed ina long but auviduons style. e by abor- 
alternate leaves. Flowers rather large or small, solitary or in 
terminal or axillary corymbs or cymes. 
Leaflets 3 to 8; petals nearly 4 in. long; seeds villou : . WW. exotica. 
Leaflets 1 10 to 20; 3 petals*about 2 lin. long; seeds siete ; . M. Kenigii. 
_ 1. M. exotica, L.; H.f. Ind. Fl. i. 502; Bedd. Sylv. Madr. 44; 
Brand. For. Fl. 48.—An evergreen tree (15—25 + 6—8 + 13- 2), 
the young shoots puberulous ; leaves unpaired-pinnate or occasionally 
pinnately 3-foliolate, glossy, glabrous, or sometimes the rachis — 
puberulous ; leaflets alt ternate, cuneate-obovate or almost obliquely 
rhomboid, shortly petioluled, blunt or bluntish acuminate, 1- “1s = 
long, coriaceous’; flowers rather large, white, in dense small 
almost sessile terminal corymbs ; petals ahout 4-3 2 in. long, rec’ 
stamens 10, alternately shorter; ovary 2-celled, the style long with 
a capitate glandular stigma ; berries ovoid-oblong, bluntish acumi- 
= nearly 4 in. long, “orange-coloured, 1-2-seeded ; seeds villous. 
48.—Common in the tropical forests of the Pegu Yomah and Martaban 
ada Tenasserim; also on the Andamans.—Fl. H.S.; Fr. May-June.—s-— 
Eee Metam., ete, 
Ks.—Furnishes the Burmese box-wood, which is white, heavy, and 
Resin ap used for handles. 
ii fie sons ; H£. Ind. _ i _— Bedd. Sylv. 
d. tree 
t: 7, ran or. Fl. —An evergreen 
Geeaee aeies be 14), ~—_— or slightly eehinaioes ; leaves 
unpaired-pinnate, the rachis usually more or Jess pubescent, rarely 
quite glabrous ; leaflets in 5-10 pairs atk: ae odd one, on a sho: 
puberulous petiolule, oblong-lanceolate or ovate, almost faleate, 
oblique at base, about 1-14 in. long, acuminate, more or less ser- 
ee membranous, glabrous, except on the midrib, which is en 
: berulous ; flowers small, white, — corpo 
