722 NOTES AND EXHIBITS. 



from rotundate to oblong-lanceolate, with apices from acute to 

 rotundate, the base of some of the narrower forms abruptly 

 broadened, the petiole of the upper leaflet varying from J to 1 inch 

 long. — Cassinia longifolia R.Br., three forms from Blue Mountain 

 localities (Coll. A. A. Hamilton). An example from Woodford 

 has leaves IJ inches long; others, from Lawson, range to above 

 3 inches long, and are narrow linear, J to 1 line broad; and a 

 Mount Victoria specimen has leaves 4 inches long, and 3 lines 

 broad. 



Mr. E. Cheel exhibited a fine series of specimens, including 

 seedlings and living plants, of seven species or varieties of Har- 

 denhergia. — H. monophylla Benth., Burwood (September, 1914). 

 This is the most common form in the Port Jackson district. The 

 figure in Bot. Mag., 263, under the name Glycinp. bimaculata, 

 which is said to have been drawn from plants raised from seeds 

 collected in Botany Bay by Banks and Solander, agrees with this 

 form. — H. 7no7wphylla Henth.., var. lo7igiracemosa{Kennedia longi- 

 racemosa, Lodd., Bot. Cab., 1. 1940; Kennedy a monophylla var. 

 longiracemosa, Bot. Reg., t.l336), Penshurst (September, 1910). 

 This has longer racemes, with flowers of a pale pink colour. — H. 

 monophylla Benth., var. alha, Unkya, via Macleay (S. G. F. 

 Smith; August, 1896: Heathcote; J. L. Boorman; August, 1904). 

 Similar in habit to the above, but with the flowers pure white. — 

 H. ovata Benth., PI. Hiigel, p. 40 {Kennedya ovata Sims, Bot. 

 Mag., 2169). The specimens exhibited were from cultivated 

 plants, which are of an upright habit, with flowers of a rosy- 

 pinkish colour. Seedlings show the same upright habit, and 

 colour of flowers as the parent-plants. There are specimens in 

 the National Herbarium collection from Tenterfield (E. Betche; 

 October, 1886); and Mount Lofty Range, S.A. (Max Koch; Sep- 

 tember, 1902); which seem to belong to this species. — H. alha 

 R. T. Baker, Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales, 1900, p.659; and 

 1907, p.711. The specimens exhibited were from Hay (August, 

 1915); and from cultivated plants. Seedlings show the same 

 upright habit, and white flowers, as the parent-plants. There 



