Artocarpus. | URTICACER. 433 
the sap srood small, coarse-fibrous and rather een the heart ose- 
grained, mottled, and takes a fine polish, like greg’ o'= 
25-80 ae is a very brittle wood, whic ent bear great alternations of 
and wet, used to dye ye ma clothes for poon eve Also in use for building 
boats ‘iat ‘for all kinds of furniture, building soitpidea! and palates ite ed in 
England er pine work, mar atey and turning, a also for brush The 
best. bird! is prepared from the milky tenacious juice, which shane 
flows og aed wounds. The fruit generally known as jack-fruit; the seeds 
roasted considered ek inferior to the best chestnuts. 
eziana, Wall.—<An evergreen (?) middling-sized tree, 
all parts quite or nearly glabrous and “somewhat pruinous ; leaves 
oblong to ovate-oblong, rounded or obtuse at the base, on a glab- 
rous petiole $-1 in. long, shortly and abruptly acuminate, 6-10 
in. long, entire, chartaceous, glabrous, glossy above, somewhat 
rough beneath, thinly and prominently net-veined between the 
strong lateral nerves; stipules lanceolate, sparingly, ares 
pubescent ; inflorescences naked, globular or irregularly globular, 
on shortly velvety-tomentose 3- 4 lin. long peduncles sae singly 
from the axils of i leaves, the flowers intermixed with peltate 
scales ; rest unknow 
Has. eae ae Nov. 
A. Lakoocha, — i pet Sylv. Madr., 219; Brand. For. 
Fl., a —Myouk-loke.— ee (40—60+ 10—30+6—10) , shed- 
: ding leaves during H.S. — cases shoots covered with a tawny or 
rusty, dense, villous tomentum ; leaves oblong, rounded or almost 
ae at yong a unequal base, ate ae usually abruptly 
y Pp 
very rough and shortly paige yg ere (he Rigi <a the saplin ngs 
Hazs.—Rather rare in the tropical es - the Pegu and Martaban hills, 
n villages all o FL. 
ag y along egal or ferrin over Burma.— 
arch-Apr. ; Fr. B.S ioe 
Remains —Wood mae ae a a rather coarse, with a dark ebony-like 
heart-wood.— O'==40 pd. Used for canoes. Roots used in dyeing yellow. 
2D 
VOL. IT. 
