51 
-??.  glauca,  A  ill.  Hedge,  Saintfield,  co.  Down,  Aug.  81, 
1905.  From  a  bush  from  which  I  once  had  specimens  so 
named. — C.  H.  Waddell. 
Pyrus  Aria ,  Ehrh,  var.  rupicola ,  Syme.  A  single  tree 
on  limestone  cliffs  above  the  Builg  Burn,  near  Inchrory, 
Glen  Avon  Forest,  S.  Banffsh.,  v.c.  94,  July  17,  1905! 
Pi  of.  Trail,  in  Annals  of  Scottish  Natural  History,  has 
recently  questioned  the  native  rank  of  P.  Aria  in  Scotland. 
Whatever  may  be  the  case  about  Braemar  the  present 
plant  is  undoubtedly  indigenous. — E.  S.  Marshall. 
P.  latifolia,  Syme.  Leigh  Wood,  N.  Somerset,  v.c.  6, 
May  81  and  Aug.  8,  1905.— J.  W.  White.  P.  Aria,  Ehrh., 
var.  decipiens  (Bechst.).  I  think  the  var.  decipiens  should 
stand  thus.  This  plant  is  a  slight  modification  of  P.  Aria, 
and  not  a  P.  latifolia  (Syme)  form. — E.F.L. 
P.  intermedia,  Ehrh.  The  Lord’s  Wood,  Gt.  Doward, 
Herefordsh.,  v.c.  86,  May  25,  1905.  Mr.  Ley  was  with  me 
and  showed  me  the  tree. — S.  H.  Bickham. 
Cratcegus  Oxyacantha,  L.,  var.  kyrtostyla  (Fingerh.). 
Scraptoft,  Leics..  v.c.  55,  May  26,  1905. — A.  B.  Horwood. 
Too  young  to  shew  the  style-character  well ;  the  young 
style  is  somewhat  bent.  A  form  or  var.  of  C.  monoqi/na , 
Jacq.— E.S.M. 
C.  Oxyacantha,  L.,  var.  monogyna  (Jacq.)  (one  and 
two  styled  form).  Scraptoft,  Leics.,  v.c.  55,  June  28,  1905. 
This  form  is  certainly  the  commonest  variety  in  the 
Midland  Counties.  The  var.  oxyacanthoides — though 
more  often  met  with  in  that  area  than  is  usually  the  case 
elsewhere — is  less  abundant  than  the  one-styled  form 
monogyna.  The  form  distributed,  which  is  an  inter¬ 
mediate  possessing  fruit  of  both  types,  the  one-styled  and 
the  two-styled  forms,  is  not  uncommon  locally  ;  and  other 
connecting  forms  between  the  four  varieties  also  occur.— 
A.  R.  Horwood.  This  I  suspect  to  be  C.  monogyna  x 
oxyacanthoides  ;  both  the  variability  of  the  style-number 
on  the  same  branch  and  the  foliage  favour  it. — E.S.M. 
Cotoneaster  integerrimus,  Medic.  Grown  at  “  Lynd- 
hurst,”  De  Freville  Avenue,  Cambridge,  from  the  plant 
which  was  brought  from  the  Gt.  Ormes  Head  by  Prof. 
Babington  in  1880.  Gathered  June,  1905.— G.  Goode. 
