66 G. King— Materials for a Flora of the Malayan Peninsula. [No. 1, 
8. Aglaia leucophylla, King, n. sp. A tree 40 to 60 feet high ; 
all parts quite glabrous ; young branches rather stout, pale, cinereous 
when dry and slightly rough. Leaves 2 to 3 feet long, unequally pin¬ 
nate ; the petioles very long, minutely rugulose when dry ; leaflets 11 to 
13, membranous, the lower alternate and distant, the upper opposite, 
oblong-lanceolate to elliptic-oblong or ovate, all with acuminate apices 
and cuneate bases, the lower half sometimes very narrow; main nerves 
9 to 15 pairs, spreading, curving, invisible on the upper but dis¬ 
tinct on the lower surface; length 6 to 12 in., breadth 1*25 to 3 in.; 
petiolules ’25 to '6 in., slender. Panicles extra-axillary, slender, rugu¬ 
lose, the branches spreading but slightly. Flowers '05 to "075 in. in diam., 
depressed-globular, on pedicels longer than themselves. Calyx much 
smaller than the petals, pale-coloured, puberulous, with 5 deep acute 
or sub-acute spreading lobes. Petals 5, dark-coloured when dry (yel¬ 
low when fresh), orbicular, concave, glabrous. Staminal tube turbinate, 
the mouth 5- or 6-lobed ; anthers 5 or 6, broadly ovate, the connective 
slightly apiculate at the apex, the apices bent downwards and not 
exserted. Ovary broad, depressed, pubescent: stigma broadly ovoid, 
the apex sub-2-lobed. Fruit (not ripe), obovoid, with depressed sub- 
bi-lobed apex; the slightly enlarged calyx persistent at the base, 
minutely cinereous, tomentose. 
Perak: King’s Collector, Nos. 1874, 2998 and 6494. Wray, No. 
2935. 
There is some diversity in the size of the leaflets and of the flowers 
of this species. My collector’s gathering No. 2998 above-quoted has 
narrowly oblong-lanceolate leaflets, and its flowers measure scarcely '05 
in diam.: while the flowers of No. 1874 are quite '075 in. in diam., and 
the leaflets of all the other gatherings, except No. 2998, are either elliptic- 
oblong or ovate. I find that the structure of the flowers is alike what¬ 
ever their size may be. 
9. Aglaia cinerea, King, n. sp. A shrub 10 to 15 feet high : 
young branches petioles, rachises, petiolules and inflorescences with 
numerous minute brown scales. Leaves 7 to 12 in. long, unequally 
pinnate: leaflets 5 to 7, alternate and rather distant; the uppermost 
pair opposite, thinly coriaceous, oblong- or ovate-lanceolate, often ob¬ 
lique, the apex shortly acuminate, rhe base cuneate, that of the upper 
three much narrowed in the lower third; both surfaces cinereous 
when dry, the lower paler and sparsely covered with rusty stellate 
scales; main nerves 8 to 13 pairs, oblique, rather straight; length 2'5 
to 6 in,, breadth 1 to 175 in.; petiolules 35 to *6 in., that of the odd 
leaflet sometimes '8 in. Panicles supra-axillary, slender, lax, 5 to 7 in. 
long, the branches divaricating, Flowers small, '04 in. in diam., globu- 
