172 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
Charles Bailey. “The panicle of Mr. Bailey’s plant from below 
the Knill Monument, St. Ives, looks too leafy for R. piLbescens^ W. 
and N., and the plant is, I think, R. adscitus^ Genev., of which less 
advanced specimens are forwarded from Penyard Park Wood, Ross, 
Herefordshire, by the Rev. Augustin Ley. The Devon and Corn- 
wall adscitus is most certainly the plant of Genevier. R. pubesceiis^ 
Rubi Germanici^ tab. xvi., has leaflets much less deeply cut than 
some of the specimens now distributed through the Club under that 
name.” — T. R. Archer Briggs. New County records for Vice-counlies 
I, 34, 45 and 59. 
Rubus pubescens. W. and N. Near Shirley, Derbyshire, July and 
September, 1887. Named by Dr, Focke. This bramble occurs 
frequently in this district, and is well defined. — W. R. Linton. New 
County record. 
R. pubescens^ W. and N., var. Chislehurst Common, rare in 
Kent, 1886. — Eyre de Crespigny. New County record. 
R. riisticanus^ Merc., teste J. G. Baker. Roadside near St. Mary 
Cray, Kent, 1887. A luxuriant shade form, with petals of a deep 
red colour, and leaflets differing from those of typical discolor in size 
and marginal characters. Two bushes in locality. — E. de Crespigny. 
New County record. 
R, La 7 nottei. Near Pentraeth, Anglesey, August, 1887. — J. E. 
Griffith. R. 7 'usticanus, Merc-, form with laciniated leaflets.” — 
J. G. Baker. New County record. 
R. ter eticaiUis^ P. J. Muell, judice W. O. Focke. Sprowston, 
Norfolk, 3rd September, 1887. — E. F. Linton. 
R. pyramidalis^ Kalt. ? Two bushes in a field at the edge of the 
narrow road above the New Bath Hotel, Matlock Bath, Derbyshire, 28th 
July, 1884. Collected for R. macrophyllus^ Weihe, but specimens sent 
to Dr. W.O. Focke of Bremen, (through Mr. Arthur Bennett) elicited the 
following opinion : — “ No true R. macro phyllus^ but it does not agree 
with any species known to me. It is, however, near the R. pyramidalis^ 
Kaltenb. (not Babington !).” — Charles Bailey. “W. anglosaxonicus^ 
Gelert, or near it (group of R. melanoxylon^ Muell.) ; very different 
from R. macrophyllusP — W. O. Focke. First record for Britain. 
R. melanoxylon^ Miill. and Wirtg., Branksome, Dorset; rough 
bushy ground, in good quantity, 29th July, 1887. This is the 
plant described by Professor Babington, in ‘Jour. Bot.’ 1887, pp. 21, 
22. I have found it this year in several widely separated localities 
near East Dorset, and also near Brockenhurst, in the New Forest, S. 
Hants. It will be of interest to several members of the Club if I add 
that the R. plinthosiylus described by the Professor in the same paper 
(page 22) is the beautiful little bramble which I sent for distribution 
as a small Koehleri form from Minster Valley, E. Cornwall, in 1885. — 
W. Moyle Rogers. New records for Vice-counties 9 and ii. 
R. melanoxylon^ Miill. and Wtgn., teste Dr. Focke. Brailsford, 
Derbyshire, 21st July, 1887. — W. R. Linton. 
R. sp. A form of the vesiitus group, perhaps R. amphichloros^ P. 
J. Miill. Shirley, Derbyshire, 20th July, 1887. — W. R. Linton. 
R. pyramidalis^ Kalt. Mousehold Heath, Norfolk. — E. F. 
