8 BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB, 
the L. salinum of Fries and Kindberg is to receive the new name of 
L. leiospermum Kindberg. Again the name L. rupestre will have 
to be assigned to its oldest claimant, a Brazilian plant, and thus we 
are led to adopt Lebel’s manuscript name of rupicola for ours. The 
two species have been recently described for English Botany Supple- 
ment in accordance with these views. 
Hypericum lineolatum. This has been met with by Mr. 
More in Ireland, in county Mayo. There is a supply of character- 
istic examples for distribution gathered by ourselves near Thirsk, 
but we do not consider it more than a mere form of perforatum. 
Sanguisorba officinalis, has been found by Mr. More in 
some plenty on the banks of Lakes Cullin and Conn, in Mayo. It 
is new to the West of Ireland, having been known previously only 
in one Irish Station, viz : — by the Bann, in Antrim. 
Circcea intermedia. Mr. Whittaker sends specimens from 
the neighbourhood of Matlock, in Derbyshire, all of which have 
thin cordate leaves and conspicuously winged petioles, but only some 
of them the setaceous bracteoles which are regarded as characteristic 
of C. alpina. It is not recorded as a plant of the Trent province. 
Polycarpon tetraphyllum. This, though now considered 
as confined to the Channel Islands and the south-west of England, 
is recorded on old authority from the neighbourhood of Hull. In 
the collection of the late Mr. Hailstone of Bradford, a portion of 
which is now in the possession of Mr. Baker, there is a specimen of 
the true plant labelled as being from this locality, with a ticket in 
the handwriting of Mr. Brunton. 
Sison Amomum. This is admitted by Mr. Babington as a 
Scotch plant, but rejected by Messrs. Watson and Syme. A speci- 
men in Mr. Winch’s collection, at Newcastle, from a field near the 
Hirsel Loch, Berwickshire, is the true plant. 
Viburnum Lantana. Noted by Mr. J. G. Baker, last 
May, in a station where it is not unlikely to be truly wild, a hedge- 
bank, near Leven Bridge, Cleveland, North Yorkshire. This is the 
only station in the county with which we are acquainted where it 
seems more likely to be indigenous than introduced. It has been 
found by the Bev. A. M. Norman, in Durham, in a hedge near 
