170 
Bunias orientalis L. (fruits). L. & N. E. R. Goods Yard, 
Hitehin, Herts., August 30, 1929. — J. E. Little. Rightly 
named. Native of E. Europe, it turns up in various parts of 
Surrey. — J. Eraser. 
Viola anglica Drabble. [975]. Ramsfold Farm, LurgashaU, 
W. Sussex, August, 1932. — R. J. Burdon and J. E. Little. 
Taking the whole gathering into consideration there is no 
doubt that this is V. anglica. Some of the specimens do not 
show the branching from the base, and in many the leaves 
are narrow and more acute than usual. — E. Drabble. 
Viola monticola Jord. [951]. Near Nine Springs, St. 
Ippolyts, Herts., October, 1931. — J. E. Little. Yes, the 
three sheets distributed are V. monticola, but not very 
characteristic. I have seen much more typical monticola from 
Wilbury Hill and West Hill, Hitehin, Stevenage, Royston and 
Cole Green — all in Hertfordshire. — E. Drabble. 
Viola agrestis Jord. ? Shipham, N. Somerset, September 
17, 1932. In rough, bushy, uncultivated ground. Corolla 
small, 9x7 mm., cream-coloured, with deep yellow eye and 
broad, roundish lobes. — H. S. Thompson. Whole plants have 
not been seen, but the long internodes and pale green colour 
seem to indicate V. segetalis Jord. — E. Drabble. 
Dianthus Armeria L. (seeds). Origin, Cookham, Berks. 
Hort. Maidenhead, August 3, 1932. — Leg. M. Gardner, Comm. 
J. E. Little. 
Dianthus 'prolifer L. Waste ground, N. & W. of railway 
station, Newhaven, Sussex, July 9, 1901. — A. 0. Hume., 
Comm. S. Loud. Bot. Inst. 
Saponaria officinalis L. Sandhills, Holme-next- the-Sea, 
Norfolk, August 21, 1932. A large clump in magnificent 
flower. — J. W. Carr. 
Silene nutans L. var. Smithiana Moss. Origin from seeds 
of plant on Nottingham Castle rock, its first-known British 
locality. Grown in my garden at Nottingham for many years 
past, and collected in June, 1932. Sent for comparison with 
the Derbyshire S. nutans sent last year. — J. W. Carr. When 
cultivated this plant evidently increases in luxuriance and 
becomes indistinguishable from the reputedly taller form of 
Dover Cliffs, about which so much confusion has arisen 
