334 
C. gallica, and I have ventured to retain it for further study. It 
is not, perhaps, allowable to cite this micro-species as “ var. 
gallica E. At.”, but in doing so the collector no doubt follows the 
practice of Dr. Druce. — C. E. Britton. 
Brassica adpressa Boiss. (B. incana Schultz. Sinapis L.) Waste 
ground by the Docks, Avonmouth, W. Glouc., Oct. 27, 1925. — 
Mrs. Sandwith and J. W. White. 
Lepidium graminifolium L. Casual on waste ground by Avon- 
mouth Docks, W. Glouc., Oct. 27, 1925. — Mrs. Sandwith and 
J. W. White. Mr. Lacaita agrees. 
Neslia paniculata Desv. Waste ground, Splott, Cardiff, 
Glamorgan, Sept. 1925. Grain-sifting alien. Coll. A. E. Wade. 
Comm. Nat Mus. of Wales. Mr. Lacaita agrees with the deter- 
mination. 
Viola arvensis Murr. aggr. [645]. Boulder clay, Gt. Wymond- 
ley, Herts., May 7, 1925. — J. E. Little. Smaller cream and 
yellow flowers, from the same station as [644]. V. variata Jord. 
var. sidphurea Drabble. Some of these specimens are unusually 
small-flowered. — E. Drabble. No. 644 from same place is V. 
variata Jord. and var. sulphurea Drabble. — E.D. 
V. rumlis Jord. Arable field, Old Down, Tockington, W. 
Glos., May 12, 1925. — Ida M. Roper. V. variata Jord. var. 
sidphurea Drabble. Very good specimens. — E. Drabble. 
Viola Herts., v.c. 22, Welwyn, June 1925.— W. R. 
Sherrin and J. E. Little. V. agrestis Jord. — E. Drabble. 
Viola Surrey, v.c. 17, near Weston, July 1925. — 
W. R. Sherrin. — V agrestis Jord. — E. Drabble. 
Viola E. Kent, v.c. 15, near Folkestone, June 1925. 
— W. R. Sherrin. V. Deseglisei Jord. — E. Drabble. 
Viola Hereford, v.c. 36, Ross, Aug. 1925. — W. R. 
Sherrin and St. J. Marriott. V. arvatica Jord. Small specimens. 
When growing with corn arvatica may reach a height of a foot or 
more ; but it is always of slender habit, with leaves shorter than 
the internodes, and with strongly divaricate peduncles. — E. 
Drabble. 
Cerastium tetrandrum Curt. Formby, S. Lancs., v.c. 59, June 
6, 1922. Coll. J. A. Wheldon. Comm. National Museum of 
Wales. A sad mixture here! Three sheets are tetrandrum ; four 
sheets are C. semidecandrum, var. glandulosum Koch ; one sheet 
contains both. I have separated all the specimens. — C. E. Salmon. 
