240 
We are most grateful to Mr. A. E. Wade, of the Department 
of Botany, National Museum of Wales, Cardiff, for acting as 
Distributor last winter, and for drafting the body of the Report, 
which he kindly had type-written. We must also thank Mr. 
Hyde and the Committee of his department for allowing the 
work to be done at their Museum. 
The Club is indebted to Mr. Lacaita for the gift of some old 
Spanish plants, and others from the district of Naples, from the 
herbarium of the late Prof. Cf. Id. Pasquale. Also to Mr. White 
for Continental duplicates of his own and the late C. Bucknall’s 
collecting. The great majority which remained over from Dr. 
Lindrnan’s consignment of Scandinavian specimens were distri- 
buted by me last summer among the more interested and 
deserving of the members and subscribing institutions, who had 
expressed a desire to receive some. 
This year we received no parcel from Stockholm, but in May 
the long expected parcels from Mr. Holmboe, of Bergen, reached 
me, and they have been similarly dealt with. Owing to impor- 
tant official and other duties they could not be sent earlier from 
Bergen. They proved a very interesting and well set-up lot, 
chiefly from the northern parts of Norwa}'. With few exceptions 
they were in quite small series, but a nominal 350 were suitably 
converted into about 413 sheets of excellent specimens. 
A special vote of thanks should be expressed to Mr. Little, 
who again sent a fine series of chiefly woody plants, selected and 
dried with great judgment, and with very careful and useful 
notes upon these and others. Mr Little wrote: “The whole 
question of Juncus conglomeratus wants revision. A large pro- 
portion of the plants so named in Herb. Mus. Brit, are not this, 
but J. effusus var. compadus Messrs. Baker and Salmon 
want Erodium material; they have not yet finished studying the 
inland forms.” 
With the exception of one Car ex of which 8 sheets were sent 
by myself (not again mentioned in the Report) it would appear 
that this iarge and interesting genus was totally^ unrepresented. 
Can no one collect some of the northern species ? 
A new member should realise that it is more important to 
state the County on his labels than merely the number of 
H. C. Watson’s “ V.C.” 
Owing to the fact that Mr. Goode discovered a parcel of 
thirty-three sets of the last Disiderata List, in March these were 
put into fresh covers, and after the list had been roughly emended, 
particularly b}^ eliminating some rare orchids, and other plants 
that should not be gathered in quantity, or which had recently 
