2 



these may be obtained by non-contributing members on 

 application to the Honorary Secretary. 



The plants received are here acknowledged with the numbers 

 reckoned as specimens : — 



List of Parcels Received. 



Mr. A. Bennett, F.L.S 60 



Mrs. C. Cotton 30 



Miss M. Dawber 88 



Mr. T. B. Flower 54 



Rev. J. D. Gray, M.A iii 



Mr. J. E. Griffith, F.L.S 62 



Mr. G. K. Gude 32 



Miss D. M. Higgins 41 



Rev. E. F. Linton, M.A 158 



Rev. W. R Linton, M A 384 



Mrs. E. A. Lomax 102 



Mr. H. T. Mennell, F.L.S 33 



Rev. W. H. Painter 68 



Mr. R. Paulson 13 



Mr. J. T. Powell 122 



Rev. H P. Reader 39 



Capt. A. Steuart 50 



Mr. H. S. Thompson 93 



Mr R. F. Towndrow 43 



Mr. F. H. Ward 273 



Mr. C. Waterfall 88 



1944 



Frederic H. Ward, Distributor for the year 1889-90. 



Caltha radkans, Forster. Hort. Croydon, 1889. Root from 

 Kew Gardens as the plant of Forster, but doubtful. — A. Bennett. 



Nasiurtinni officinale^ R. Br., var. viictophylliim (Boenn.) Reichb. 

 Dadnor, near Ross, June 15th, 1889. — M. Dawber. Agrees 

 fairly well with the plant of Reichenbach. — Boenninghausen 

 described it as a species. — A. Bennett. 



Viola canina X lactea [intermedia H. C. Watson). Near Hedge 

 Court, Surrey, by W. H. Beeby. Hort. Croydon, 1889. — Com. 

 A. Bennett. 



Arenaria laxa (Jord.) } Penpole Pt., Gloucester, May, 1S89. 

 — H. S. Thompson. Tenuifolia, type only. — A. Bennett. 



Sagina apetala. Linn., var. piostrata, Bab. Gravel walks, 

 Milverton, Warwickshire, August, 1889. — Eliz. Lomax. Yes. — 

 A. Bennett. 



Lepigoniim Salinum, L. Eastbourne, June 1886 — Col. T. A. 

 Cotton. Var. neglectum ^^Kindb.) — A. Bennett. 



Hypericum linarifoliuni, Vahl. St. Catherine's, Jersey, August 

 24th, 1888. — M. Dawber. This is certainly not linarifoHum but 

 a huniifusuni form whether this is the plant Syme mentions 

 (Eng. Bot., Vol. 2, page 156. 1864) as occurring in Jersey near 

 Noirmont Point, " strangely interm^ediate between this species 

 {linarifvliuni) and H. humifusuni^ some specimens approaching 

 to the one and some to the other. Most of these forms are no 

 doubt the //. decumbens of Petermann, which is H. huniifusimi 



