549 
Charles  Bailey.  Yes,  a  sativa  form.  One  of  my  examples 
might,  I  think,  pass  for  the  paludosa  (Sole)  state  of  it. 
— C.E.S. 
M.  verticillata  L->  f-  between  ballotifolia  and  ovalifolia 
Briquet.  Same  locality  and  dates  as  above;  named  for  me 
by  M.  Briquet  in  1898.  I  am  unable  to  separate  the  two 
varieties. — Charles  Bailey.  Yes,  under  sativa ,  no  doubt. 
Bather  intermediate  between  rivalis  Wats,  and  paludosa 
(Sole)  ;  on  the  whole,  nearer  the  latter. — C.E.S.  I  agree 
with  Mr.  Bailey,  and  can  see  no  appreciable  difference 
between  the  two.— A.B.  Two  forms  of  the  variable 
M.  sativa  L. — E.P.L. 
M.  aquatica  x  arvensis,  (=  M.  sativa  L.).  Grassy 
drove,  King’s  Wood,  Yatton,  N.  Somerset,  v.c.  6,  Aug.  18, 
1915. — Ida  M.  Roper.  Rightly  named.— -E.S.M.  &  E.F.L. 
Yes,  correct,  a  small  form.— A.B.  I  agree;  it  would  seem 
to  come  under  rivalis  Wats — C.E.S. 
M.  gentilis  L.  (=  M.  arvensis  x  spicata  A.  Thellung). 
Garden,  Haymesgarth,  Cleeve  Hill,  E.  Glos.,  v.c.  83,  Sept. 
10  and  21,  1915. — Charles  Bailey.  Not  what  we  usually 
know  as  M.  gentilis.  Apparently  this  is  a  cultivated  plant 
of  one  of  Mr.  Bromwich’s  forms  of  M.  gracilis  Sm.  from 
Haseley  Common.— E.F.L. 
Origanum  vulgare  L.,  var .  albiflorum  Lej.  Field, 
near  Netherlands  Copse,  Guildford,  Surrey,  v.c.  17,  Aug. 
1915. — J.  Comber.  I  believe  this  is  the  sub-var .  pallescens 
Coss.  &  Germ.,  (which  they  formerly  considered  a  full  var.). 
It  may  be  synonymous  with  albiflorwin  Lej.  ( See  B.E.C. 
Rept.,  1913,  p.  490). — C.E.S. 
Thymus  Serpyllum  L.  (1)  (Ref.  Nos.  135,  136,  137, 
139,  141).  Harlech  Golf  Links,  Merionethsh.,  v.c.  48, 
Aug.  11  and  18,  1915.  The  plants  from  which  these 
specimens  were  taken  were  all  growing  under  exactly  the 
same  conditions  in  one  spot,  a  level  piece  of  turf  among 
the  sandhills.  There  were  several  clumps  of  each,  which 
were  easily  recognisable  at  some  distance. — W.  C.  Barton. 
No.  141 — T.  Serpyllum  L .,  var.  angustifolius  Gren.  &  Godr. 
(=  T.  angustifolius  Pers.).  Nos.  135,  136  and  137 — forms 
between  var.  linneanus  G.  &.  G.  and  var.  angustifolius 
