260 A' wart, White, Rees and Wood: 



Matricaria I-XODORA, L. " Scentless Cluunomile." (Compositae). 



Coode Island, Victoria. J. R. Tovey and C. French, Jnr., 

 October, 1908. 



A native of Europe and Asia. This introduced phmt may 

 be now cL^ssed as an exotic, not yet sufficiently established to 

 be considered naturalised. 



Milla (Tritelia) uniflora, R. Grah. " Triplet Lily.'' 

 (Liliaceae.) 



Apparently growing wild in Fawkner Park, Melbourne. J. 

 AY. Audas. 13/9/1911. 



Olearia pannosa, Hook. '' Velvet Aster." (Compositae.) 



Anglesea, Victoria, A. G. Campbell, November, 1906. 

 Brisbane Ranges, Victoria, P. R. H. St. John, 16/9/11. 

 The most southerly locality in Victoria for this species 

 hitherto recorded. 



OxYLOBiuM CALLISTACHY8, Benth. (Leguminosae.) 



Heath ground at Sandringham, C. French, Jr., October. 1911 ; 

 Mentone, Victoria, C. R. Roberts, January, 1911. 



This plant was originally supposed to be 0. al pest re. a native 

 species. (See Proc. Roy. Soc. Victoria, 1911, p. 71.) Material 

 has now been obtained in all stages, and the mode of dehiscence 

 of the pod shows it to belong to the above species, which is 

 native to West Australia. Mr. French supposed the plani 

 to be a garden escape. Mr. Roberts states that: — ■ 



"It ^rows in springy peat land about a quarter ot a mile from 

 tlie road, and there is no garden or cultivated giound nearer than 

 perhaps half to three-quarters of a mile. It grows in a copse 

 perhaps twenty feet square, shrubs up to six or seven feet 

 high in the midst of native plants. I do not think that the 

 Oxylohium co\ild have been artificially planted there, although 

 there are no others near it that I have seen for miles around. 

 Its nearest point to the sea would be half a mile. As there are 

 a number of these plants growing together I can only think 

 that perhaps originally the seed must have been evacuated by 

 a bird.'' 



