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SHORT NOTES AND QUERIES. 23 
of thecounty. They were all observed wore half a mile of Kirtling 
Tower :—Ranunculus sceleratus (in a damp. cornfield ; a stunted sient 
eous form, about three inches high) ; Papavor eoguie rn orange- 
coloured juice) ; 88 onium maus; Silen 
um; H. hirsutum; Rhamnus sake tie "Thioliun feafewna 
Melilotus oficinals; Spirea Ulmaria; Epilobium montanum; Cigo- 
podium Podagraria ; Pimpinella saan 3 P. Saxifraga ; Silaus praten- 
818 5 Angelica sylvestris; Arctium eu-minus; Carduus erispus (the 
ubsoli 
hieracioides ; Helminthia echioides ; Campanula Trachelium; C. rotun- 
difolia ; Verbascum Blattaria (roadside, probably an escape); Linaria 
Cymbalaria; Scrophularia nodosa ; Euphrasia Odontites ; Feics 
agrestis; V. Buxbaumti; Mentha arvensis; Calamintha Clinopodium ; 
eens palustris fon ede m: i a (in a damp cornfield ; a stunted, 
florifero rm); Euphorbia amygdaloides ; E. exigua ; Juncus 
eae riseastee with a very lax "panléley “i lamprocarpus; Carex 
pendula; C. sylvatica; C. Pseudo-Cyperus ; Poa compressa ; 
commutatus; B. arvensis; Lolium ideibarlaian: Polypodium vulgare. 
Few of these plants are either particularly rare or interesting in them- 
selves ; it is only with reference to the local flora that they ean claim 
any special polioe on either score. Hypericum dubium (Journ. Bot. 
27 f 
for the aaty ilene noctiflora, Euphorbia amygdaloides, Care 
pendula oie S. nay hard. n occur in one other spot 1 he 
within some considerable distance ; but the majority are ov da 
ai their head-quarters in the neighbouring woodlands.—R. 
Journal, p. 295?  Heterophylla was one of the snaatis names is€ 
by Dryander when he first defined the genus (Linn. Trans., vol. iii., 
p- 48, t. 8, fig. 1), and this name has been used for a totally different 
plant from the Australian one by all succeeding writers.—J. G. 
AKER, 
