7 



extreme states ? I doubt it. — E.S.M. True siifolium is 

 often two feet long, with purple stems, &c. — A.B. 



Arabis hirsuta, R. Br. var. Near Malvern Link, 

 Wore, 7th June, 1903. — S. H. Bickham. I believe 

 this form of hirsuta to be the A. htrsida var. mcisa, 

 Wallroth Sch. Cat. (1822). I have it also from cliffs in 

 Argyle, gathered by Mr. Macvicar. I should Hke to 

 have seen ripe fruit. — A.B. Only one specimen of this 

 sent.— H.P.R. 



Erophila prcecox, DC. Malvern Wells, Wore, 

 28th April, 1903. — S. H. Bickham. Correct, I believe. — 

 A.B. 



Cochlearia alpina ? Ben Lawers, alt. 3,000 ft., 1903. 

 — E. Cleminshaw. The only specimen in ripe fruit sent 

 to me has veinless pods, and is certainly C. micacea, — = 

 E. S. Marshall. From the flowers and foliage of the 

 remaining specimens I judge them to be the same. 

 C. alpina, H. C. Watson, is usually a coarser plant, with 

 larger and more succulent root leaves. — E.S.M. 



C. alpina. H. C. Wats. Upper Teesdale, 13th 

 June, 1903. — H. S. Thompson I have gathered this 

 plant in the same locality, and believe it to be rightly 

 named, though the habit approaches that of C. danica 

 more nearly than usual. The root, however, appears 

 to be perennial, whereas C. danica is usually, if not 

 always, annual. Beautifully dried. — E.S.M. 



Viola lutea, Huds. var. ? Craig Cailleach, Perth, 

 August, 1903. — E. Cleminshaw. This is the large 

 flowered var. amcena, Huds. of V. lutea. It also grows on 

 Ben Lawers. I think Mr. Baker has lately given it a 

 special subvarietal name. — E.S.M. Yes, sub-var. 

 insignis. — H.S.T. 



Lychnis Viscaria, L. Blackford Hill, Edinburgh, 

 1903. — F. C. Crawford. 



L. alpina, L. Little Culrannoch, Clova, Forfar, 

 1903. — F. C. Crawford. 



Sagina, sp. Ben Cruban, near Killin, and Ben 

 Lawers, Perth, August, 1903. — E. Cleminshaw. 5. 



