T9 
Erythrcea  — - .  Exposed  Downs,  Newquay,  W. 
Cornwall,  v.c.  i,  Oct.  3,  1904.— S.  H.  Bickham.  (1)  E . 
pulchella.  (2)  E.  sphcerocephala .  (3)  Two  plants  look  so 
intermediate,  I  don’t  know  where  to  place  them,  unless 
(?)  hybrids  between  the  two. — E.F.L.  New  county  record 
for  E.  splicer ocephala. 
Gentiana  Amarella ,  L.  Kilconquhar  Links,  Fifeshire, 
v.c.  85,  15  Aug.,  1900.— A.  Somerville. 
Cynoglossum  germanicuni ,  Jacq.  Ashstead,  Surre}7, 
6  Aug.,  1904. — C.  E.  Salmon. 
Asperugo  procumbens ,  L.  Stackyard,  Blaby,  Leicester¬ 
shire,  v.c.  55,  3  June,  1904. — W.  A.  Vice.  Can  only  be 
claimed  as  a  casual  here. — W.B. 
Symphytum  asperrimum ,  Bieb.  Naturalized  near  Wring- 
ton,  N.  Somerset,  v.c.  6,  9  July,  1904. — J.  W.  White.  “  I  take 
this  to  be  a  form  of  the  fodder  plant  referred  by  Sir  Joseph 
Hooker  (Bot.  Mag.,  1879,  t.  6466)  to  S.  peregrinum,  Ledeb. 
Sir  J.  Hooker  remarks  (l.c.)  : — ‘  That  it  is  not  the  true  A 
asperrimum  of  Donn,  figured  by  Sims  in  this  work  (t.  929)  is 
obvious  from  a  comparison  of  that  plate  in  which  the  calyx 
is  correctly  represented  as  short,  and  shortly  5-cleft  to  the 
middle  only,  with  obtuse  lobes,  and  which  has  curved  prickles 
on  the  stem  arising  from  conspicuous  white  tubercles.’  If,  as 
Mr.  Baker  (B.E.C.  Report,  1879,  P-  24)  suggests,  the  British 
5.  peregrinum  is  a  hybrid  between  5.  officinale  and  S.  asperri¬ 
mum, ,  that  would  account  for  its  variability.  In  the  present 
plant  the  calyx-teeth  are  certainly  shorter  and  blunter  than 
in  that  collected  by  Mr.  White  at  Brass  Knocker  Hill  in 
1894.  would  be  interesting  to  know  whether  or  not  these 
plants  produce  seeds. — J.G.”  From  B.  Exch.  Cl.  Rept., 
i904>  P-  32- 
Verbascum  virgatum ,  Stokes.  Cultivated  at  Clifton, 
2 5  July,  1904.  Origin  near  Plymouth. — J.  W.  White. 
Linaria  supina ,  Desf.  (1)  Par,  E.  Cornwall,  v.c.  2, 
18  June,  1904. — F,  H.  Davey.  (2)  Par  sands,  St.  Blazey 
Bay,  E.  Cornwall,  v.c.  2,  23  Sept.,  1904. — S.  H.  Bickham. 
Two  beautiful  series  of  this  charming  plant  and  nicely 
prepared. — W.B . 
Euphrasia - ,  Thorpe  Cloud,  Derbyshire,  v.c.  57, 
24  June,  1904 — W  Bell.  A  small  state  of  E.  curta ,  var. 
glabrescens ,  or  between  that  and  the  type. — E.S.M.  E. 
brevipila ,  B.  and  G. — F.T. 
