558 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
To see the characters of this plant well, it is necessary to gather it 
when the flowers are at their best. — A. B. Jackson. “I do not 
quite see why this is considered to be a hybrid. Is it not small- 
flowered G. germanicci ? ” — E. G. Baker. “ These are not quite 
identical with my x G. Pamplinii — G. C. Druce. 
Limnanthemum peltatum , Gmel. In the river Thames above 
Oxford, September 1896. — G. Claridge Druce. 
Cynoglossum montanmn , Hojerin ‘Linn. Amoen. Acad.,’ iii. (1764), 
402 ; C. germanicum , Jacq. Wychwood Forest, Oxfordshire, June 
1884. — G. Claridge Druce. 
Asperugo procumbens , Linn. Alien, Twerton, Bath, 8th September 
1897; vide ‘Journ. Bot.’ (1897), p. 444. — S. T. Dunn. 
Myosotis repens , Don. Braemar, South Aberdeen, June 1897. — 
G. Claridge Druce. 
Myosotis versicolor , Sm., ‘sub. E. B.,’ Reichb., t. 2558; var. 
Balbisiana , (Jord.). Swyre Head, Dorsetshire, 25th May 1897. On 
this piece of ground there was a quantity of Myosotis growing, and all 
had golden-yellow flowers without the smallest shade of blue. — 
Charlotte E. Palmer. “ Jordan states M. Balbisiana differs from 
M. versicolor , Pers., by ‘racemis minus laxis longius basi nudis, calice 
vero clauso sub duplo breviore, corollis fere triplo minoribus, tubo 
parum exserto, akeniis conspicue minoribus, foliis tenuioribus, caule 
multo graciliore et humiliore.’ Miss Palmer’s specimens agree fairly 
well with this.” — E. G. Baker. “The plant remains constant in 
cultivation. A much older name for the type is M. arvensis , Hill, 
‘Veg. Syst.,’ vii., 55 (1772), of which I should call this var. Balbisiana, 
(Jord.).”— G. C. Druce. 
Solatium nigrum , Linn., var. miniatum , Bernh. Garden weed at 
Milverton, Warwickshire, September 1897. — H. Bromwich. “Cor- 
rect.” — E. G. Baker. “Yes; the forma glabrescensP — J. Freyn. 
Linaria repens x vulgaris , and L. vulgaris x repens. From chalky 
ballast near the Great Western station at Oxford. The extreme plant 
in which vulgaris is present to the greatest extent is what I called, in 
‘Report Bot. Exchange Club,’ 1893, 421, x L. Baxterii. See ‘Flora 
Berkshire,’ p. 368, and ‘Annals of Botany,’ December 1896, 622. — 
G. Claridge Druce. 
Mimulus Langsdorffii, Donn. = M luteus , Pursh. and auct. Angl., 
not of Linnceus. M. guttatus, DC. See ‘Flora Berkshire,’ p. 374. 
Margins of the River Chess between Latimer and Chenies, Bucking- 
hamshire, September 1897. In such plenty as to appear like the 
marsh-marigolds when seen from a distance of a quarter of a mile — 
G. Claridge Druce. 
