26 
Euphrasia . Meadow near Dolygaer, Breconshire, v.c. 
42, June 19, 1929. Coll. A. E. Wade. Comm. Dept, of Botany, 
National Museum of Wales. E. borealis. Quite eglandular, 
almost perfectly glabrous, with smooth and shining surfaces to 
the foliage. The larger leaf measured 13x1 1mm. The flowers 
are yellow. — W. H. Pearsall. E. borealis. The flowers in my 
specimens show no signs of having been yellow.-— E. Drabble. 
A fine set of E. borealis Towns., but one plant of E. Rostkoviana 
Hayne included on one sheet. — H. W. Pugsley. 
Euphrasia brevipila Burnat and Gremli. Pasture, W iseman s 
Bridge, Saundersfoot, Pembrokes., v.c. 45, July 2, 1929. 
Ida M. Roper. Correct. — H. W. Pugsley. ^ es, brevipila. 
E. Drabble. E. brevipila, glandular hairs very numerous and 
very short on the foliage, longer on the stem. — W. H. Pearsall. 
Euphrasia brevipila Burnat and Gremli. Both sides of 
Durston’s drove, Ashcott peatmoor, Somerset, July, 20, 1929, 
On the E. (sunny) side the plants and flowers were smaller, 
and rather burnt up. On the W. side, shielded by bracken, it 
was less affected by drought. — H. S. Thompson. Yes, brevi- 
pila, with short glandular hairs on the leaf. — E. Drabble. E. 
brevipila, glandular hairs short on foliage — but not so short 
as on Miss Roper’s plants — and very long on the stem. — W. H. 
Pearsall. Yes, plants not very glandular. — H. W. Pugsley. 
Euphrasia brevipila Burnat and Gremli, var. notata Pugsl. 
ined. — (No. 451), Slopes below Ben Lawers, Perthshire, 
6 Aug., 1929. This handsome eyebright, which is remarkably 
abundant about Lawers, was described by Townsend in Journ. 
Bot. XXXV. 473 (1897) as E. Rostkoviana x brevipila (E. 
notata Towns.). In the Club’s Report for 1902—3 the same de- 
termination was again given for specimens collected at Lawers. 
The suggested hybrid parentage cannot be accepted as there 
is apparently no evidence of E. Rostkoviana occurring in the 
Scottish highlands. — H. W. Pugsley. The glandular hairs are 
very long and the corolla tube seems to lengthen. x\re these 
characters of var. notata ? — E. Drabble. 
Euphrasia . [802], Speymouth, Morayshire, Sept. 9, 
1929. — Leg. K. D. Little, Comm. J. E. Little. E. brevipila. 
— E. Drabble. E. brevipila. Variable plants as regards their 
clothing, most of them possess glandular hairs of variable 
lengths scanty or absent on the stems. One simple plant has 
short glandular hairs only, and none on the stem. A very 
small plant is nearly eglandular, only four or five glandular 
