Australian Plants. 49 
in the Mallee Scrub towards the mouth of the Murray 
River. 
BResembles in habit Eurybia lepidophylla. 
46. Westringia senifolia. 
Erect ; stems densely hirsute; leaves about six in a whorl, 
crowded, spreading, lanceolate-linear, acute, sessile, with 
revolute margins, above glabrescent and scabrous, beneath as 
well as the calyces hirsute; flowers white, axillary, nearly 
sessile, forming on the top of the twigs a foliate spike ; cayees 
to the middle divided, hardly as long as the leaves; its seg- 
ments lanceolate-subulate. 
On rocks in the Buffalo Ranges and on the ‘summit of 
Mount Buller. 
47. Westringia violacea. 
Leaves three in a whorl or rarely opposite, linear-lan- 
ceolate, awnless, with slightly recurved margins, glabrous on 
both surfaces or beneath along the rib hairy, above dotted- 
scabrous ;_ pedicles, calyces and twigs appressed - hairy; 
bracteoles linear-subulate, four or five times shorter than the 
ealyx; teeth of the calyx lanceolate, acuminate, hardly longer 
than its tube; corolla violaceous, puberulous. 
48. Westringta grevillina. 
Leaves three in a whorl, coriaceous, broad-linear, spread- 
ing, acute, with revolute margin, above smooth, beneath as 
well as ealyees and branchlets more or less grey velvet-hairy; 
“oom of the calyx mueh shorter than its tube; corolla velvet- 
airy. 
On the rocky coast of the Port Lincoln District. CG. 
Wilhelmi. 
Nearest in its affinity to W. cinerea. 
SCROPHULARINZ. 
49. Veronica Hillebrandi. 
Stems short, erect or ascending, all over covered with 
short reclined hair; leaves thick, on short petioles, somewhat 
rough, oblong or hastate-ovate, grossly and remotely 
serrated, truncate or rarely tapering at the base; racemes 
corymbose, axillary, few-fowered; bracteas ovate-lanceolate; 
= 
