REPORT FOR 1914. 



133 



Malva pusilla Sm. Bank near Corn Mill, Yentongimps, v.-c. 1, 



August 11, 1914. F. RiLSTONE. 



Tilia platyjjhyllos Scop. Park, Barton Seagrave, Nortliants, v.-c. 

 32, July 31 and September 5, 1914. Introduced. — G. Chester. 

 " No, this is Tilia 2)ftiolaris, which is frequent in cultivation, but does 

 not seem to have been found in a wild state. It is considered to be a 

 sport of Tilia argentea, the White Lime of South -Eastern Europe and 

 Asia Minor." — A. B. Jackson. 



Tilia ulmifolia, Scop. Rockingham Woods, Northants, v.-c. 32, 

 July 30, 1914. Rather frequent in this and other outlying woods, and 

 probably indigenous. — G. Chester. "This is the small-leaved lime 

 Tilia cordata Miller. The latter name has been rejected on the 

 ground that specimen assumed to be Miller's type, in the British 

 Museum, is 1\ platyphyllos, but as pointed out by Mr A. Henry 

 {Trees of Great Britain vii., p. 1656, 1913), there is no doubt that 

 Miller's description of T. cordata in the Dictionary refers to the small- 

 leaved lime and not to T. platyphyllos, and his name therefore takes 

 preference over Scopoli's ulmijolia.^^ — A. B. Jackson. 



Geranium phaeum L. Open wood, Watton, v.-c. 28, May 17, 

 1914. — F. Robinson. 



Geranium pyrenaicum Burm. Dry hedge bank, Croxton, v.-c. 28, 

 June 1, 1914. — F. Robinson. 



Geranium rotundifolium L. Dry hedge bank, Thetford, v.-c. 28, 

 June 1, 1914. — F. Robinson. "A rare Norfolk plant."— G. C. Druce. 



Geranium Rohertianum L., var. purpureum VilL? Shingle, Pag- 

 ham, W. Sussex, v.-c. 13, June 13, 1914. "This Geranium is what 

 we always used to call G. purpureum, but what it is called now I 

 cannot say. It is a coast-shingle form, and is not, I believe, found 

 inland." C. E. Salmon, in lit, August 16, 1914. — J. E. Little. 

 " Too hairy for the plant of Foster and Villars, but still of the type 

 undoubtedly. It is, however, what is often named purpureum. The 

 carpels closely resemble those of Foster's plant. It may be the var. 

 rubricaule Horn, in Willk. et Lange's Prod. Fl. Hisp. iii., p. 320, but 

 I have seen no specimens of this." — A. Bennett. " I gathered this 

 there in 1901. Mr Arthur Bennett wrote : — ' What we so call ; but 

 Britten and Nicholson years ago denied the name.' " — E. S. Marshall. 

 " Yes, the glabrous- carpelled plant under Siggreg'dte purpureum Yill." 

 — G. C. Druce. 



Geranium Rohertianum L., var. [Ref. No. 117]. Bordeaux 

 shingle, Guernsey, August 2, 1914. — W. C. Barton, " Yery different 



