58 THE JOURNAL OF BOTANY 
Auten Pants NEAR Lonpoy.—In Journ. Bot. 1906, 396, I pub- 
lished a note under this heading. My friend Mr. Raine, of Hyéres, 
has asked me to give a list of certain interesting plants he found 
last August, on waste ground in the south of London, of all of which 
specimens have been seen by me, viz.:—Linum angustifoliwm 
Huds., Sydenham; ZL. perenne L. and Salvia verticillata L., waste 
roadside near Eliot Bank ; Ornithopus sativus Brot. pro parte = 
roseus Dufour, Vicia peregrina L., V. varia Host, Caucalis dau- 
coides L. and Valerianella coronata DC., waste ground near 
Sydenham. I am not aware that V. coronata has been found in 
England before, and it is difficult to account for its appearance at 
Sydenham; the specimens were in good fruiting condition and are 
identical with those at l’Herbier Boissier near Geneva — H. 
THOMPSON. 
LEPTODONTIUM GEMMASCENS Braithw.1n Herts.—On. Nov. 30th 
last I saw this rare Moss on the decaying thatch of an old summer- 
house in the grounds of Mr. H. Clinton Baker, at Bayfordbury, 
Herts. It was associated with two common species, Dicrano- 
Surrey, Herts, Mid-west York, and Forfar, but has not yet been 
recorded from any locality outside Britain.—A. B. JACKSON. 
petals which mark this Rose from its congeners. It will probably 
istricts; but it must be remem 
i orm does not exhibit the size and luxuriance of 
leaf and fruit exhibited in the garden form: hence probably it has 
remained unrecognized.—Augustin Ley. 
Saux HERBACEA L. IN CARMARTHENSHIRE. — While plant- 
hunting in company with Rev. C. H. Binstead and the late 
lamented Rey. W. R. Linton on the Carmarthenshire hills in July, 
1906, I had the good fortune to come across this alpine species on 
one of the higher points of the cliff called “ ¥ fau sirgaer ” in fair 
quantity. Mr. H. H. t, of Llandovery, informs me that he 
subsequently found it at a second station on this precipice.— 
Avueustin Ley. : ee cd 
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