352 MR. J. H. GURNEY ON THE SOUTHERN GREY SHRIKE. 
27. Norfolk E. 
Near Yarmouth, Sept., 1808. Lilly Wigg. 
Chapel Denes, &c., Yarmouth. Paget, N. Hist. 64, 1834. 
Growing intermixed with C. olidum on waste ground under 
the old Barracks at Yarmouth, and on the bank of the river 
near where the whalebones stood. Trimmer, FI. Norf. 122, 
1866. 
Haddiscoe, 1880 ; Winterton, 1881 ; Bacton, 1870 ; Halver- 
gate, 1872; Reedham, 1877; Trimmer, Supp. FI. Norf. 50, 1884. 
28. Norfolk W. 
Recorded from Hunstanton in 1863 by Prof. Babington, 
“ but the plant found was C. rubrum, L. var. pseudo-botry- 
oides.” H. C. Watson in litt. I saw only rubrum from 
Hunstanton and Holme to Thornham in 1876. 
Channel Isles. 
Lihou, island off Leree Point in the west of Guernsey. 
Aug. 14, 1900. C. R. P. Andrews, sp. 
IV. 
SOUTHERN GREY SHRIKE 
(LANIUS M ERIDIONA LIS) IN NORFOLK. 
By J. H. Gurney, F.Z.S. 
Read 30 th October, 1906. 
Mr. E. M. Connop, whose museum contains probably the 
largest collection of British killed rarities of any in England, 
has a Grey Shrike which differs from the ordinary British 
type in several important particulars. It was shot at Drayton 
near Norwich, in December, 1890, a month of frost as I see 
from my journal, and is the same one mentioned at p. 9 of 
Mr. Southwell’s catalogue of the Connop Collection. 
On placing this bird, which is marked a male, on the table 
with ten other British Grey Shrikes, as well as skins of Lanins 
