+ 
* m 
244 REPORT OF THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB 
September last s as a good-sized patch on the side of the Canal, about 
a mile below the city. I am not sufficiently acquainted with the s 
specimens, however, thinking they m ay po ssibly prove acceptable to 
some who are interested in introduced species.”—F, I. Warner. I 
believe this to be one of the forms of 4. carneus, oes 
Phyteuma spicatum, L. Segg eiden, Perth. “Having observed (some 
eight or ten | years ago), i in the spring, the leaves of a plant of which I 
wee it proved to be P. spicatum, from which the present specimens are 
taken. It is a solitary plant, and has slowly increased since its first dis- 
T up o 
enay 
were several, but only a few have been taken off for fear r injuring the 
plant. There is no record of it having been cultivate e e garden 
here, from whence it might have escaped." —H. M. Drummonp Har. 
Pyrola rotundifolia, Jd Near Multy Farnham, Westie ve T. 
TursELTON Dyer. Professor Thiselton Mash s specimens seem to me 
identical with the var. arenaria sty Southport ^ 
ola minor, L.—* Withou t flowers, in a coppice of oak and birch 
scrub, a short half mile across the bog, eastward from Ascot Station, 
Berks. A new locality probably, if not also a species new to the flora 
of the county as hitherto recorded # —H. C. Warson. 
Erythrea latifolia, Sm. (vera).—* I only found two specimens, both 
very dwarf in habit, on the 19th of J uly, 1871. They were growing in 
a Stassy spot among the sand-hills near Freshfeld Railway Station, 
band Laneashire."—Rosggr Brown. The specimen sent by 
Brown is certainly the true Z, latifolia. It is satisfactory to know that 
this Sitian local plant is not extinct, of which there seemed to 
Epipactis latifolia, S utellaria minor, etc." —G. S. STREATFEILD. al 
Mimulus guttatus, De Candol lle. Ina pete “cae na wild phen in Vale 
cated by Mary Ed The ^ Berdign ic won t he 
station for M. talent on ite Wooler Water, near Earl Mill, gi eS 
authority of os ai : Ex Baker New ora of Nonae 
o Sii pratensis, L. ** Charlbu Though 
ury, Oxon.”—E. F. LINTON. 
Oxford has been know wn to produce this iuris doubtless few botanists 
Plantago lanceolata. L., var. Timbali Mars “A il bg n ^ 
; paina 
Sites rossa variety of P. lanceolata; seemingly P. t 
RM Mr. W: atson’ e tions to & pe 
of Berkshire.” " LB. Journ, Pu) nan in Britten's ** Contributio | 
