Original design is two bushes, a plain bush outboard, and an inner, drilled bush. This is relieved on the ID where it joins the outer bush to provide a small reservoir for oil, providing lubricant as the mainshaft rotates at a different speed to the sleeve gear in the intermediate gears. In top gear mainshaft and sleeve gear rotate as one.
Most originals I have seen were steel backed split tube type bushes, with a thin layer of bearing metal as a facing. A single solid bush still needs the gap in the middle and the three oil holes. There's probably a name for this type of composite bush, also seen on car front suspension units where the damper rod moves into the strut body.
Swarfy.