8 
Order CELASTRINEZ. 
Trine HIPPOCRATEA. 
dul p:) W 
a thick, rough, corky outer bark on the trunk, the wood close-grained, 
when fresh yellowish; the branches dividing at their extremities into 
numerous long, slender, thong-like, drooping branchlets. Leaves usually 
Hab. : e Electric Telegraph Station, Cape York Peninsula, Geo. 
Jacobson—who says that the fruit is edible, and resembles in taste the common white 
guava, which it is not unlike in size and appearance 
This new species differs from S. australe in the texture and form of leaves, the 
pendulous branches, and size of fruit, and in the figure of its wood. I think i may 
prove identical with one ing in the scrubs of Tringilburra Creek, of which! 
picked up fruit, but could not identify the tree from which they had fallen. 
Order RHAMNER, Le 
CRYPTANDRA, Sm. 
C. longistaminea, Fv. 1 a 
1.443. A much-branched unarmed shrub of 2 or 8 ft., the smaller — 
k 2 
tomentose, quite distinet from the ovary. Ovary sessile or slightly : 
immersed in the disk. Style very shortly 3-lobed.— Benth. l.c. 
Hab. : Condamine, C, H. Hartmann ; Gladfield, C. J. Gwytier. 
Order SAPINDACER, 
Scuporper SAPINDEA. 
NEPHELIUM, Linn. 
°° 
of Queensland.) A tall erect tree with umbrageous head; trunk atta 
ing a diameter of 1} to 2 ft., bar ( 
pinnate, glossy, narrow-lanceolate in outline, the young 
