2IC FOREST TREKS, &C* * 



JRoompoot jiolo — strong sucmlent grass, with 

 slight roots; the stalk contains a pith used for lamp* 

 wicks. It is eaten by rattle. 



FLOWERS. 



Of these there are (he Mailor of Arabian jas- 

 mine — the mallar ootan or wild jasmine — the 

 chumpaka, very odoriferous — the boonya tonkeng 

 — the mamplas, a sweet-scented reddish flower, 

 growing- on a creeping shrub, the leaves of which are 

 used to polish hard \\ 04 >d — ingre, a parasitical plant, 

 having- a very pleasant ly-seeuted white flower — the 

 innvi, the flower of the shrub whose leaves are used 

 to stain the finger-nails red. Tin n is also a beauti- 

 ful species of yellowish hfmey-suekh which grows in 

 Ihe woods — besides many oilier flowering shrubs, de- 

 serving the attention of the florist, if not the botanist. 



