Olea. | JASMINER. 157 
OO Petals about 3 lin, long. 
Leaves without veins between the nerves. : . : - O. terniflora. 
* > Corolla funnel-shaped, with a longer or shorter tube. 
Panicles all terminal, glabrous or pubescent . « O. robusta, 
1. 0. dentata, Wall.—An evergreen tree (40—60+4 (?) +38—4), 
all parts glabrous or the young shoots puberulous; bark rough, 
brownish grey, about 4 in. thick; cut brownish; leaves elliptically 
oblong to oblong and lanceolate, acuminate at the base, on a 3-4 
lin. long petiole usually red-coloured, 8-6 in. long, long but blunt- 
ish acuminate, more or less serrate-toothed to almost entire, rigidly 
coriaceous, smooth and glossy, the nerves and veins impressed 
beneath ; flowers small, yellowish white, both sexes with corolla, 
dioecious, the males on short but slender puberulous pedicels form- 
ing branched, puberulous, cymose panicles, the females sessile or 
nearly so, by 3 or more, forming a brachiate, poor, puberulous 
panicle in the axils of the leaves; bractlets minute ; petals about a 
line long ; drupes ovoid, the size of a small pea, glabrous. 
Has.—Frequent in the drier hill forests and the hill Eng forests of Martaban 
and Upper Tenasserim, at 2,000 to 3,000 ft. elevation; also in the tropical forests 
above Rangoon.—Fl. June-Jan.; Fr. Apr.-May.—l.—SS.—= Pp. 
Remarxs.—Wood white or pale brown, turning dark brown, very heavy, 
rather coarse-fibrous, but close-grained. 
2. 0. dioica, Roxb.; Bedd. Sylv. Madr. 153.—A pretty large 
tree with ash-coloured bark, all parts glabrous; leaves oblong 
to oblong-lanceolate, acuminate at the base, on a 8 to 4 lin. long 
petiole, 3-5 in. long, shortly acuminate, remotely and sharply 
ernifl 
+3—4), all parts quite glabrous ; bark about } in. thick, dark grey, 
roughish and finely-cracked; cut greenish brown ; leaves oblong 
petiole, 3-5 in. long, shortly and bluntish acuminate, entire, coria- 
Ceous, glaucous-green, glabrous, the nerves beneath tolerably dis- 
tinct without distinct veins between them ; flowers small, white, 
. 
