426 
Polygala serpyllacea Weihe. With blue, red and white 
flowers. Longmorn, near Elgin, Morayshire, June 28, 1927. 
— K. D. Little, Comm. J. E. Little. 
Dianthus deltoides L. Near Llandudno, Carnarvon, v.c. 49. 
— I. Helsby. 
Cerastium tetrandrum Curt. Dunes near Littlehampton, 
W. Sussex, v.c. 13, May 16, 1927.— E. C. Wallace. [Ref. 
1403], The bulk of the material is correctly named but 
mixed with the gathering I found a very few examples of 
C. semidecandrum var. glandulosum Koch. These I have 
separated by paper slips. — C. E. Salmon. 
Cerastium subtetrandrum (Lge.) Murb. Burgenland, Austria 
Ad lacunas salsas, inter Frarienkirchen et Podersdorf, 
May 30, 1926. — K. H. Rechinger. I suppose this is right, 
but many of the plants do not agree with Murbeck’s des- 
cription, “ caulis ramique a medio vel in superiore tantum 
parte floriferi.” — C. E. Salmon. 
Cerastium viscosum. Dunes west of Littlehampton, 
W. Sussex, v.c. 13, May 16, 1927. — E. C. Wallace [Ref. 1404]. 
I should place this under var. elongatum Druce. — C. E. Salmon. 
Small specimens showing the characteristic habit. It 
varies greatly in size. — J. Fraser. 
Sagina ciliata Fr. Foot of wall, Littlehampton, W. 
Sussex, v.c. 13, [Ref. 1405], May 25, 1927. Growing with 
Sagina procumbens. — E. C. Wallace. Excellent examples of 
this somewhat rare species. All the stems — not the central 
one only, as stated by some authors— are flowering, eglandular 
and glabrous. Babington’s description of this species is 
still the best published, and this character is splendidly 
shown in his examples in the Cambridge Univ. Herbarium. 
The sepals are pointed and equal, or slightly exceed, the 
capsule to which they are adpressed. — W. H. Pearsall. Yes ; 
excellent specimens. — C. E. Salmon. 
One scrap on my sheet is of a procumbent stem, with 
fasciculate ascending leaves and deflexed tips to the peduncle 
after flowering, and has one flower with sepals expanded in 
the form of a cross. I believe this to be S. procumbens L. 
Two complete plants are without central rosette, but have 
the sepals expanded. These are the eglandular form of 
S. apetala Ard. 
In the rest the outer sepals are mucronate, and both calyx 
