396 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
also received from Mr. Dunlop, from Acton Grange, a Galeopsis, 
which proved to be G. dubia Leers. The plant was growing freely 
in a potato-field in soil overlying the Bunter Sandstone. I believe 
that this constitutes a new record for Cheshire.—Eric Drassie. 
G 906, 
Hemsley announces the ‘ discovery ” of this plant in Norfolk, in a 
pine-wood near Holt, in the north of the county. This locality is 
probably identical with that of Bodham recorded in this Journal for 
1902, p. 825, whence specimens were sent y Mr. F. J. Spurrell 
to the National Herbarium. Mr. Spurrell noticed it on Beeston 
stand. 
rans. Hort. Soc. i. 801) by Salisbury in 1812; he no doubt 
detected its distinctness from Neottia and Satyrium, and regarded 
N. repens as its type, but his name is accompanied by no diagnosis, 
h 
‘Aiton’s Hortus Kewensis (ed. 2, v. 197, 1813), therefore stands as 
the generic name.—James Barrren. 
Avren Prants near Lonpon. — My friend Mr. F. Raine, of 
Hyéres, and I have collected several interesting aliens this summer 
in the neighbourhood of Croydon, some of which are not to be 
found in Mr. Dunn’s Alien Flora of Britain. Perhaps the most 
rowing 
waste land we observed Senecio viscosus (in large quantity), 3. syl- 
vaticus, Anthemis tinctoria, Serratula tinctoria, Erigeron acre, E 
lum named VJ 
Heldr. & Sart., no. 749 bis, from Greece ( Parnassus), which Halacsy 
: A 
botanists, that V. vill V. varia Host are quite distinct species, 
I would place both the Croydon and the Parnassus vetch as the 
