358 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
name, since it also conserves that of Tournefort; but this is 
Antirrhinum, one is an Anarrhinum, one Nemesia, and thirty-four 
are Linaria. Miller (1. c.) separated the Tournefortian Linaria 
(Cirsium). The six remaining species belong to five different 
genera :—Tyrimnus, Mariana, Notobasis, Serratula, two being 
Jurinee. 
ther examples need not be given ; enough has been brought 
forward to show the danger of pressing the question of numerical 
g 
breach than the observance, since any supposed advantages of 
strictly applying the principle would, if it were strictly and logi- 
y followed, produce enormous changes, or add very largely to 
the already too long and arbitrary list of “nomina conservanda.” 
In what one fears will be a distant future, when an Inter- 
