83 
specimens  of  a  tiny  dark-glumed  Club-rush,  barely  an  inch 
high,  which  looks  more  like  a  dwarf  Scirpus  pauciflorus 
than  Eleochdris  dciculdris ,  and  deserves  further  attention 
— E.S.M. 
Mdlvd  verticilldtd,  L.  Bubbish  heaps  round  “  Under- 
down,”  Ledbury,  Herefordsh.,  v.c.  36,  July  8,  1906. — S.  H. 
Bickham. 
M.  boredlis,  Wallmann,  (=  M.  pusilld ,  Sm.).  Growing 
intermixed  with  M.  rotundifolid,  Linn.,  on  building  land, 
previously  sandhills,  between  Park  Boad  and  Orchard  Boad’ 
St.  Anne’s-on-the-Sea,  W.  Lancs.,  v.c.  60,  Sept.  22,  1906’. 
The  locality  has  been  subsequently  covered  by  houses. 
This  plant  is  not  native  to  St.  Anne’s,  but  is  one  of  a 
large  number  of  alien  species  introduced,  as  I  believe,  in 
grain-siftings  and  sweepings,  as  food  for  poultry.  A  list 
of  the  alien  plants  of  St.  Anne’s  is  in  the  press,  and, 
when  published,  a  copy  will  be  sent  to  the  members  of 
both  the  Watson  Club  and  the  Botanical  Exchange  Club 
of  the  British  Isles.— Charles  Bailey.  In  Bab.  Man.,  ed.  9, 
the  carpels  of  M.  pusilld,  Sm.  are  described  as  “  meeting 
each  other  with  a  toothed  edge.”  This  plant  has  them 
straight-edged,  and  the  inner  sepals  stellately  pubescent  ; 
so  I  believe  that  it  is  M.  rotundifolid ,  L.— E.S.M.  Malva 
rotundifolid,  L.,  with  the  fruit  rather  less  pubescent  than 
I  have  usually  seen  it,  but  not  at  all  untypical.  The  fruit 
of  M.  boredlis  is  usually  still  less  pubescent,  and  easily 
distinguished  from  M.  rotundifolid  by  its  strongly 
reticulate  and  pitted  dorsal  surface. — E.F.L. 
M.  pusilld,  Sm.  Bissoe,  W.  Cornwall,  v.c.  1,  Sept.  6, 
1906.  In  two  spots ;  one  near  a  grist  mill,  where  it  was 
mixed  with  M.  rotundifolid,  L.,  the  other  as  a  garden  weed 
half-a-mile  distant.— F.  H.  Davey.  Bightly  named.— 
E.F.L.  I  think  that  this  is  correctly  named. — E.S.M. 
Linum  perenne,  L.  (1)  Cherry  Hinton,  June  15, 
1906— E.  J.  Allard.  (2)  Fleam  Dyke,  June  20,  1906.— A.  J. 
Crosfield.  (3)  Little  Trees  Hill,  Gog  Magogs,  June  26, 
1906.  Coll.  B.  H.  Goode.  Comm.  G.G.  Cambs.,  v.c.  29. 
All  three  sets  are  beautiful  specimens. — S.H.B. 
Gei  diiium  stridtum,  L.  Smeeth,  E.  Kent,  v.c.  15, 
July  9,  1906.  Sent  in  case  it  may  be  a  new  v.c.  record. 
Coll.  E.  Foord-Kelcey.  Comm.  F.L.F.-K.  No — see  Han- 
bury  and  Marshall’s  “  Flora  of  Kent,”  p.  76.— S.H.B. 
