SHORT NOTES 427 
and August, and I am now able to announce several county and 
vice-county records. The following are additions to the Cornish 
list :—Rubus rosaceus . & N. subsp. infecundus Lane 
near College Wood, Penryn. ‘This subspecies was erroneously 
included in my Tentative ot of Cornish Plants (1902). — R. hirti- 
folius Muell. & Wirtg. var. pei Rogers. Ponsanooth, 
Carnmarth Hill, and [Cdamt Downs. — R. Griffith tanus Rogers. 
Sparingly on a field hedge at Relincaticben — R, pallidus Wh. & N. 
A few bushes on the Sale, Ponsanooth. — R. Marshalli Focke & 
Rogers var. semiglaber Rogers. A goodly number of bushes at the 
top of the Cairns, Ponsanooth, This was recorded in Journal of 
Botany for April, p. 181, as R. horridicaulis P. J. Muell.—R. radula 
eihe. Conno r Downs, near Hayle. Previously all records _ 
this species were placed under the subspecies anglicanus ee 
. Lejewnet . & N. var. ericetorum. From Goonorm j 
St. Gluvias. Mr. Rogers refers it to omer umbrosa, and designates 
it ‘*rather weak.”’—Records for v.-c. 1 are :—R. macrophyllus Wh. & 
N. subsp. Schlechtendalii (Weihe). Field near Mabe Reservoir ; 
nsanooth ; woods at Kea Playing Place, near Truro; ‘ panicle 
more Barag ie than usual. A beautiful form which occurs near 
Plymouth.” — R. cariensis Rip. & Genev. Bissoe, Ponsanooth, 
enone Wood. — R. dumetorum Wh. . var. ferox Weihe 
Greensplat, in Gwennap parish.—R, afinis Wh. & N. vay. Briggsi- 
anus Rogers. Tresamble Bottoms, near Ponsanoo th. Previously 
recorded only for the extreme eastern portion of the county.— 
gratus Focke. Tresamble Lane, Perranarworthal. Not previously 
known west of Pillaton atte and Clapper Bridge.—R. corylifolius 
m. var. cyclophyllus (Lindeb.). Sea-cliffs at St. Ives; an apie 
sion laces d of this variety of about fifty miles—F rep. Hamitro 
Dave 
ee Dp CsEsairE Recorps confirmed. — Inula Conyza DC. 
This sant ‘A aqua in the ie ogee to Dickinson’s Flora of 
Liverpool, the sagt rity J. Harrison, as growing 
‘‘ between Sutton te ridge a d Button lock’’; the record reappears 
in the Flora of cpm g 1872, with the suggestion that recent 
confirmation would os comet! but it finds no place in Dr. Green’s 
later Flora. In the fe! Cheshire rear de aoe! ad 
John siaeeeon cata adds error, 
ream confirmation.”’ ip there is Be oe of this ¢ ie ry : 
hestine plant in Top. Bot. ed. ii., or in Mr. Bennett’s Supplement 
thereto, it may be as well to sags that I saw it growing in some 
quantity, for several years, in the precise station indicated b 
John Harrison, and that sm 1 last visited the spot—in 1899 ae 
1900—the plant was as ea ote oo as ever. I qui 
believe that it is native h a steep bushy daclviy 
on the side of the Weaver aly a “little ‘e Sutton Lock, and it 
is quite outside the zone of the usual canal-bank aliens, which are 
so abundant hereabout. I have not seen it elsewhere in Cheshire, 
but have found it plentifully in William Harrison's recorded station 
“above the Dungeon at Hale” (Supp. Dickinson’s Flora). This 
station is about six miles away, and is on the Lancashire side of 
