306 N'UTKS AND EXHIBITS. 



Herbarium, by permission of the Director. Likewise, on be- 

 half of Mr. Ernest 1. Bickford, fresh flowering specimens of 

 ChatiHclaucium. unciiiafinn Schau., from a plant introduced 

 two years ago from Geraldton, W.A., where it is commonly 

 known as Wax-Plant. 



In response to the Secretary's request, made at last meet- 

 ing, for exhibits of specimens of some of the rarer Blue 

 Mountain species of Fersooiiia, for comparison with some un- 

 common forms whose identiflcation was puzzling, Mr. Baker 

 showed F. oblongata A. Cunn., and P. Cunninghainii R.Br, j 

 Mr. Cheel showed F. oblongata, F. revoluta Sieb., and F. 

 Cuniiinghaitiii : and Mr. Fletcher showed F. oblongata, F. 

 rigida R.Br., /'. Cuunuig/iamii,* a species which Mr. Cheel and 

 Mr. A. A. Hamilton considered to be F. media R.Br., (re- 

 corded only from Queensland, and from the Hastings and 

 Clarence Rivers in New South Wales, in the Flora Austra- 

 liensis ; whose occurrence on the Blue Mountains is, therefore, 

 as surprising, as the fact that it should have been overlooked 

 so long), and P.sp.,t obtained by Mr. H. Deane at Newnes, 

 still to be identified. 



P. tnyrliloides var. hremfolia Beuth.; see also p. 348. 

 t P. CimniiKjhaviii R.Br. 



