7369. — Stereculia gigantifelia Slim. ne eps irect slender 
tree or often subscandent shrub, sparingly branched; leaves 
subcoriaceous, orowded st the ends of the thiek twigs and subtended 
by large brown bracts; racemes in leaf axils, 1 to 3 feet long; 
ficowere purplieh brown. Palo, Leyte, January, 1906. 
7370. Galliearpa peloensie Sim. me sp. A flat topped 
epreading tree 10 meters high; bark thick and cheeked; flowers 
pale white; berries small, pink or purplish when fully mature. 
Palo, Leyte, January, 1906. 
— TETLs Antidecma leptoeladum Tul. Lax undershrab in 
wooded ravines, & meters high; matare berries juliey, shinins red 
or dark brown. Palo, Leyte, January, 1906. 
WST2. Fieus picifersa Vall. Lax finely branched shrub 4 
meters high, in woods and on cliffs slong the river; figs yellowish 
whem mature, the sise of amall pear, ecubsessily elustered in the 
leaf axils. Palo, Leyte, Janusry, 1906. 
7575. Gordie blancoi Vid. . Shrub of the dry hill country, 
2 meters high, with whitish flowers. Palo, Leyte, January, 1906. 
7574.  Premna eumingiana Scheur. Large shrubs or tree like, 
4 meters high; flowers yellow or pale white. Palo, Leyte, 
January, 1906. 
2.7376. vodia glabra Bln. e 8 meters high: with white 
flowers. Palo, Leyte, Janvery, 196 
7376.  Talaume villeariana Rolfe. Small spreading tree 3 
or more meters high, in deeply shaded woods of the foothills; 
fruits pendulous, solid, green, usually axillery: the caps of. the 
earpels falling early, leaving the pale red seeds exposed and 
eubpersistent. Palo, Leyte, January, 1906. 
7377.  Gymmacranthera sulphfyascens Sim. ne sp. Lax shrub 
or small tree 3 meters high; flowere ase well as buds yellow; 
leaves sulphreas beneath. Palo, Leyte, January, 1906. 
7377." Glosghidion leytense Glm. Nn. Bp. A € to # meter 
high tree like shrab; flowers yellow or yellowish white; smooth 
bark dark brown. Palo, Leyte, January, 1906. 
T37B. Pandenue banaheensis Elm. ne sp. Trees solitary, 
eonfined to eanyons and ravinee of the wood and forests from 700 
to 1200 meters, about 15 meters high with a broed flattened top 
or crown; etems comparatively short, prop toots thick end often 
extending from the ground clear to the branches; heads subglobose 
or ovoid, about 6 inches in diameter, solitary upon 4 £ feet long 
reeurved peduncle; leaves thick and hard to dry; drupes short and 
thick, without odor. Lueban, May, 1906. : 

