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QUEENSLAND. 
Let us begin with this State, since the type came from the banks of the Narran 
River, say, in lat. 29, and Sir Thomas Mitchell also found it due west of Rockhampton. 
An official report says, " Plentiful in scrubs, and fairly so in thick forest country, 
the best trees being in open country in the Goondiwindi, St. George, Roma, and Inglewood 
districts." 
It is represented in the National Herbarium of New South Wales from the 
following localities, taking the northernmost first. 
Central Railway Line. Duaringa, 65 miles west of Rockhampton (A. Beck). 
Received under the name of " Peppermint," as already explained, from Sapphire 
or Anakie, 193 miles west of Rockhampton, just south of Clermont (A. Morrison). 
Maryborough to Mundubbera Line. Mundubbera (E. W. Bick). 
Western Line. Cunnamulla, extreme south-western end (F. H. Perkins). 
Copy of a label, " Small tree and shrub, 10-15 feet high, in the scrubs west of 
Darling Downs, mentioned in my Expedition. Jimba." (Dr. Leichhardt. ) Near 
the modern Jimbour, 16 miles from Dalby. 
Chinchilla, 50 miles from Dalby (Dr. John Shirley). 
Goondiwindi, on a branch line south of Warwick, and not far from the New South 
Wales border (R. B. Mclntyre). 

NEW SOUTH WALES. 
Ticketty Well, between Wallangra and Yetman (Forest Guard A. Julius). 
Warialda (Rev. H. M. Rupp, J. L. Boorman). Bingara (Miss P. M. Blundell). 
" Beautiful shade tree, grows up to 30 feet high and 2 feet thick, 50 miles north- 
west of Collarenebri " (S. W. Jackson). 

We now come to the Pilliga district. Wee Waa (Forester T. W. Taylor, No. 16). 
Baradine Creek, Baradine (Dr. H. I. Jensen, No. 86). Yarrie Lake, Pilliga Scrub, 
19 miles from Narrabri (Dr. H. I. Jensen, No. 21). Common near Narrabri (J.H.M.). 
Parish Dubbleda, County Pottinger, 6 miles from Boggabri, 16 feet high, 36-inch girth 
(Forester M. H. Simon). Gunnedah to Coonabarabran (W. Forsyth). ". Bushy tree 
of 12 feet, with Buddha and Narrow-leaved Box, county White (E. H. F. Swain, 
No. 19). 
We now go a little west. Coonamble (E. Breakwell). 
We now go to the Northern railway line, and the following five specimens get 
so far east through the Cassilis Geocol. Murrurundi (Forest Guard L. A. Macqueen). 
Belltrees, Scone (H. L. White). Page River, Scone district ; also Hunter River, 4 miles 
easterly (J.H.M./ August, 1899). Most eastern localities recorded. Murrumbo, Goul- 
burn River (R. T. Baker). Minembah, Whittingham, near Singleton (Denis Browne, 
August, 1904). A western plant hitherto only recorded in the east from the Page River. 
