248 
Euphrasia  Vigursii  Davey.  Goonhavern,  W.  Corn¬ 
wall,  v.c.  1,  Sept.,  1909. — Coll.  W.  Tresidder.  Comm.  C.  E. 
Salmon.  According  to  Dr.  F.  N.  Williams  this  name  is 
synonymous  with  his  f.  rectipila  of  E.  officinalis  L.  (=  E. 
Rostkoviana  Hayne),  var.  minor  Gaudin.  These  specimens 
were  given  to  me  by  Mr.  Arthur  Bennett. —  C.E.S. 
E.  Kerneri  Wettst.  (1)  Most  abundant  on  chalk  hills 
about  Great  and  Little  Kimble,  Bucks.,  v.c.  24,  Aug.,  1909, 
and  (2)  Minchinhampton  Common,  W.  Glos.,  v.c.  84,  Aug. 
2,  1909.  The  specimens  from  Minchinhampton  Common 
are  miserably  poor,  but  are  as  good  as  I  could  find  in 
August,  1909.  I  send  them  to  shew  the  great  difference 
in  growth  between  these  and  the  prevailing  form  about 
Kimble  in  the  same  month.  Are  the  Gloucestershire 
plants  dwarfed  from  poverty  of  soil  or  because  the  cattle, 
turned  out  to  pasture  on  the  Common,  browse  on  them  ? — 
F.  L.  Foord-Kelcey.  Just  like  the  Surrey  E.  Kerneri. — 
E.  S.M.  Yes,  E.  Kerneri  Wettst.— C.  B.  The  Kimble 
plants  are  excellent  Kerneri  Wettst.  The  dwarfing  in  the 
Minchinhampton  plants  is  probably  due  to  grazing 
animals. — E.  &H.D.  (3)  Chipstead,  Surrey,  v.c.  17,  Sept.  9, 
1909. — R.  S.  Standen.  Yes,  E.  Kerneri,  very  good  material. 
— E.  &  H.D.  Right.— C.B.  &  E.S.M. 
E.  scottica  Wettst.  ?  Cwm  Idwal,  Carnarvonsh.,  v.c. 
49,  Aug.  6,  1909. — G.  Goode.  A  small  alpine  or  sub-alpine 
state  of  E.  scottica  Wettst.,  I  believe. — E.S.M.  Yes, 
E.  scottica  Wettst. — E.D.  This  is  an  abnormally  slender, 
weak  form,  almost  as  hairy  as  E.  curta.  It  appears  to 
have  grown  in  boggy  ground,  and  may  therefore,  I  think, 
be  safely  named  as  above. — C.B. 
Mentha  rotundifolia  Huds.,  var.  Bauhini  Ten. 
Origin:  Wells,  Norfolk.  Cult.  Ledbury,  Aug.  20,  1909.— 
S.  H.  Bickham.  This  cultivated  specimen,  with  leaves  on 
the  branches,  shows  a  shading  off  to  sylvestris  ( longifolia ), 
but  the  mam  stem  leaves  show  the  “  largement  arrondies 
a  leur  sommet.”  The  leaves  of  cultivated  specimens  are 
also  less  rugose,  but  show  the  irregular  dentation  well, 
and  the  flowers  show  the  “  exserted  stamens.” — A.  B. 
This  came,  by  way  of  my  garden,  from  near  Wells,  where 
it  was  found  by  Dr.  Long  and  named  var.  Bauhini  by  Mr. 
Ar.  Bennett.  It  maintains  its  peculiar  facies  after  years 
