A SCIENTIFIC EXPEDITION TO TEMENGOH. 35 
er ones ¥ inch long, cylindric acuminate curved, base 
prolonged, no dorsal process ; smaller ones shorter less 
curved and only shortly acuminate, all yellow. Style 
slender long. Capsule urn-shaped covered with conic 
processes, little over $ inch long, lobes of operculum in 
dehiscence large ovate acute dorsally grooved 4 the 
length of the ovary. Seeds linear sigmoid smooth, 
pale, with a curved point. 
Selangor, Gunong Menkuang Lebar at 5400 feet. 
(Fred. Dennys.) 
A very distinct plant, its indumentum consisting of 
cylindric acuminate trichomes horn-shaped. The 
ovary in flower tapers downwards into the pedicel and 
is something of the shape of that of a typical oxyspora, 
but in fruit actually urn-shaped. 
It is nearest to O. stellulata, King and resembles O. 
pamculata De C. in indumentum. 
O. rosea Ridl. Allomorphia rosea, Ridl. Trans. Linn. Soe. Ser. 
WE IGE, SOUL, 
This plant is certainly an Oxyspora. It is quite 
omitted from the Materials by King, as is almost 
every species described in the above paper. It is a 
low shrub almost completely glabrous, except for scurfy 
papillae all over the young parts, stem, petioles, inflores- 
cence and ovary. The leaves are large, 12 to 18 inches 
long, with a pair of nerves, very slender running along 
the edge and close to it and rising from the base, a pair 
of nerves rising from the midrib half an inch_from the 
base and running to the apex, parallel with the outer 
ones and half an inch from them, the transverse ner- 
vules about 22 pairs horizontal raiged on both surfaces. 
The petiole 3 inches long. Panicle 6 to 9 inches long 
with branches 3 or more inches long. Flowers rogy. 
Ovary pustular papillose. Sepals very shortly ovate. 
Petals small ovate. Stamens 8 dissimilar, larger ones 
R. A. Soc., No. 57, I910. 
