76 G. King — Materials for a Flora of the Malayan "Peninsula. [No. 1, 
21. S. campanulata, Wall. A tree 60 to 60 feet high : young 
branches rather slender, rusty-tomentose, soon becoming glabrous. 
Leaves membranous, broadly ovate, shortly acuminate, entire ; the base 
usually deeply cordate, 3 to 7-nerved ; sometimes 3 to 5-lobed ; lateral 
nerves 3 or 4 pairs ; upper surface glabrous, the midrib and nerves 
pubescent or puberulous ; lower surface pubescent ; length 4 to 6 in., 
breadth 3' 75 to 5'5 in. ; petiole 2'25 to 5 in. puberulous : stipules lateral, 
subulate, caducous. Panicles 3 or 4 in. long, in clusters of 2 or 3 at the 
apices of the branches, few-flowered, glabrous, erect, sub-corymbose ; 
pedicels jointed, about '3 in. long, bracteoles caducous. Calyx widely 
campanulate, more than - 75 in. across, green, pruinose, glabrous, veined, 
its mouth cut half-way down into 5 triangular velvetty-edged lobes : 
Staminal column pubescent below. Ovaries gibbous at the apex : styles 
short, cohering ; stigmas filiform, recurved : ovules 2, erect. Follicles 
3 to 6, on slender puberulous stalks, membranous, veined, 2 to 3 in. 
long, boat-shaped, saccate with a sub-terminal lanceolate wing. Seeds 
sub-globose, with a shining crustaceous testa, '5 in. long or less. Mast, 
in Hook. fil. FI. Br. Ind. i. 362; Kurz For. FI. Br. Burm. i. 139. 
Pterocymbium Javanicum, Br. in Benn. PI. Jav. Rar. 219, t. 45 ; Miq. 
FI. Ind. Bat. i. pt. 2, 179. Pt. campanulatum and Javanicum, Pierre, 
FI. Forest. Coch-Chine, t. 195. 
Perak ; Fr. Scortechini, King’s Collector. Nicobars, Kurz. Distrib. 
Malayan Archipelago, Burmah. 
M. Pierre (1. c.) remarks that, in his opinion, the two species cam- 
panulatum and Javanicum, although closely related, are distinct species ; 
but he does not mention the characters on which he relies for separating 
them. After dissecting many flowers of the tree (until recently grow- 
ing in the Botanic Garden, Calcutta), on which Wallich founded his 
species campanulatum, I cannot see any respect in which they differ 
from Robert Brown’s minute and excellent description and figures of Pt. 
Javanicum. 1 therefore agree with Dr. Masters in considering the two 
as one and the same species. 
22. S. ttjbulata, Mast, in Hook. fil. FI. Br. Ind. i. 362. A tree ; 
young branches about as thick as a goose-quill, tomentose at the very 
points, the bark dark and rather rough. Leaves thinly coriaceous, ellip- 
tic-oblong, with a short abrupt rather blunt apiculus ; edges entire ; the 
base broadly rounded or sub-truncate, very slightly cordate; when 
adult both surfaces glabrous except the midx-ib and main nerves which 
are minutely rusty-tomentose ; main nerves 5 to 7 pairs, spreading, 
slightly prominent below : length 4 in., breadth 1 ’ 75 in. ; petiole '75 in. 
slender, deciduously rusty-tomentose. Cymes terminal, as long as the 
