114 
Flora.” It should be noted that P. Persicaria may occasionally 
have a few stalked glands on the peduncles, as in this plant of 
Miss Roper’s. — C.E.S. 
Rumex pulcher L. x. Chichester, W. Sussex, v.c. 13, Aug. 1, 
1918. — R. J. Burclon. This plant is in rather too young a state 
for identification. R. pulcher L. is one of the parents, and my 
friend Mr. Pugsley suggests R. obtusifolius L. as the other. The 
principal hybrids of R • pulcher are : — 
R. pulcher x obtusifolius (R. Ogulinensis) Borb. Mag. bot. 
Lap. III. (1904), 49 ; Beck in Reichb. leones FI. Germ. 
XXIV. Found in England by Dr. Trimen. 
R. pulcher x conglomerate (R. Muretii) Hausskn. Mitt. 
Geogr. Ges. Thiir. III. 73 (1885); Beck in Reichb. leones 
FI. Germ. XXIV. 46. 
R. pulcher x crispus Trimen Journ. Bot. XVII. 251 (1879). 
R. crispus x pulcher (R. pseudopulcher ) Hausskn. Nyman 
Conspec. Suppl. 271 (1890); Beck in Reichb. leones 
FI. Germ. XXIV. 47, t. 191, fig. 4 — 6. — E.G.B. 
Euphorbia Cyparissias L. Rough meadow, away from houses, 
Welwyn, Herts., v.c. 20, June 10, 1918. — Coll. R. Morse. Comm. 
J. E. Little. 
Mercurialis perennis L. Large broad leaves (40 — 60 mm. 
broad), more acuminate than usual, thinner, paler green, and 
with small sharper serrations. Moggs Wood, Tickenham Hill, 
N. Somerset, v.c. 6, Aug. 20, 1918. Not the var. ovata Hoppe 
& Sternb., which has “almost sessile leaves.” — H. S. Thompson. 
TJlmus montana Stokes, appr. var. laciniata Trautwetter ? 
Great Wymondley, Herts., v.c. 20, July 3, 1918. The “Camb. 
Brit. Flora” describes U. glabra Huds., forma granclidentata, as 
having “Laminae larger, thicker, and more hairy than in the 
common form, often with one or more very large teeth on each 
side of the central one.” Mr. A. B. Jackson allows that these 
sheets approach var. laciniata , which I take to be synonymous 
with Dr. Moss’ forma grandidentata ( = U. corylacea, var. grandiden- 
tata Du Mortier). — J. E. Little. 
U. stricta Lindley ? Appledram, W. Sussex, v.c. 13, Oct. 5, 
1918. At Appledram there are two rows of trees. Near Old Park 
Farm a few trees On the other side of Chichester, near The 
Broyle, several long rows. The leaves when fresh were mostly 
incurved from the midrib. The trees are pyramidal in shape, 
with rather straight ascending lateral branches. — J. E. Little. 
