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name “ diver sifolia” can scarcely be applied to plants where, 
apart from size, the leaves show such an agreement in shape, 
taking the lowest stem-leaf to the uppermost one. Diversijolia 
denotes a form with conspicuously pinnatifid stem-leaves and un- 
lobed branch-leaves. In these Cambs. specimens it seems to mo 
that there is no distinction in shape between the stem-leaves and 
cameal-leaves, and I should not hesitate to name them var. 
subintegra. — C.E.B. [Unfortunately, Mr. Lacaita left for Italy 
this spring without sending his notes.— Hon. Sec.] 
Hiemcium Peleterianum Merat. Cliffs, La Moie, Jersey, June 
12, 1923. — W. C. Barton. The plant received is a somewhat 
slender shade form, but is no doubt correctly named. It is easily 
distinguished from H. pilosella by the absence of long, prostrate 
stolons with leaves decreasing upwards. The long shining hairs 
on the upper leaf-surfaces and the villous eglandular involucre 
are also characteristic.- — H. W. Pugsley. 
II. pulmouarioides Vill. Alien ; long established on wall at 
Richmond Hill, Clifton, Bristol, v.c. 34, July 6 and 20, 1923. 
Flowers small after drought. — H. S. T. 
II. cambricum F. J. H. Origin : Great Orme’s Head. Cult : 
Ledbury, June 8, 1923. Seeds freely on my limestone rockery. 
— S. H. Bickham. Well-dried garden specimen of this very dis- 
tinct Hawkweed, which is remarkable and almost unique in the 
genus for its nearly glabrous stems and foliage. — H. W. Pugsley 
Taraxacum lacistophyllum Dab 1st. Hartford Heath, Kent, v.c. 
16, June 1923. Teste G. C. Druce. — St. John Marriott. 
Limonium recur mm C. E. Salmon. Sea-cliff, Isle of Portland, 
Dorset, Sept. 13, 1923. The story of this remarkable plant and 
its long-continued confusion with S. Dodartii Gir. was fully told 
by Mr. Salmon when describing and figuring it as a new species 
in “Journ. Bot.” 1903. My earliest gathering is dated 1865, 
though I remember seeing some of it a year or two earlier in the 
hands of Mr. Henry Groves, of Weymouth and Florence, who 
subsequently studied Sea Lavenders on the Mediterranean coasts. 
In 1886 I sent specimens to the Bot. Exchange Club, with a note 
(Rep. p. 155) based on the then accepted opinions of Babington, 
Boissier, and IJewett Watson, now untenable. I must also with- 
draw the assertion that this was the only Statice known in Port- 
land, made in ignorance of the presence of binervosum on the 
East Were. It may not be generally known that Babington 
never went to Portland, and that when T. B. Flower took Syme 
there they missed the sput, and did not see recurvum. As stated 
