432 J. H. MAIDEN. 
On p. 247, Part xviii. of my Critical Revision, I am in 
doubt about Maxwell’s Mount Hlphinstone. Mr. CO. R. P. 
Andrews writes :— | 
‘‘There isa hill of this name at the end of Princess 
Royal Harbour at Albany, just on the left of the railway 
as you leave the harbour in travelling away from Albany. 
I have not the slightest doubt that this is Maxwell’s 
locality.”’ 
6. EKUCALYPTUS HH#MATOXYLON, Maiden. 
[This Journal, xLvir., 218 (1913). ] 
The buds and flowers have not been previously described. 
Buds in a large corymb consisting of individual umbels 
of 4to 7. Hach peduncle thin, flattened, ribbed, and about 
2°5 cm. long; the pedicels similar but slenderer, and from 
1 to 1°5 cm. long. The bud club-shaped, the operculum 
pointed, short, less than half as long as the calyx-tube, 
which is contracted at the orifice, and which does not 
taper gradually into the pedicel. 
Flowers. Vilaments cream-coloured, stamens inflected 
in the bud, the anthers all fertile, long and somewhat pale, 
opening in parallel slits, sma]! gland at the top; versatile. 
Style ribbed, the stigma hardly exceeding it in thickness. 
The anthers, style and stigma appear to be identical 
with those of E. corymbosa. 
