634 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
name “var. vallicularum , nov. var.,” this being the name I proposed 
for it before receiving the above communication from Mr. Rogers. 
It occurs abundantly on the borders of the Haugh Wood, Mor diford ; 
also on the borders of Yatton Wood, some miles further south, 
Herefordshire. — Augustin Ley. “This is very satisfactory Bucknalli , 
an 6- of much interest to me. The points of difference noted above, 
of which those relating to the foliage seem the more important, 
are to my mind insufficient for separate recognition. I am glad to 
see this plant from Herefordshire.” — Ed. 
Potentilla procumbens , Sibth. Llanwrtyd Wells, Brecon, June 
1900. — W. II. Painter. “A mixed gathering. Two plants sent to 
me — the smaller one is P. silvestris ; the other I think to be P. 
procumbens x silvestris rather than pure procumbens .” — E. S. Marshall. 
Rosa pimpinellifolia x rubiginosa. Boxley Warren, E. Kent, 8th 
July 1900. — A. H. Wolley-Dod. 
P. scabriuscula , Sm. Burwardsley, Cheshire^ 15th July 1908. — 
A. H, Wolley-Dod. “ Correct.” — ■ J. G. Baker. 
Pyrus minima , Ley, fruit. Near Crickhowel, Brecon, September 
1900. — H. J. Riddelsdell. 
Kibes petrceum , Sm. Welton, near Egremont, Cumberland, 15th 
May, 17th June 1900 . — Joseph Adair. 
Ly thrum Hyssopifolia , L. Les Marais, St. Ouen’s, Jersey, 29th 
July 1900. In fair quantity in this locality ; the only one, I believe, 
in the Channel Islands.— Stanley Guiton. 
Epilobium Lamyi x lanceolatum. Hort. Shooter’s Hill; orig. near 
Swanscombe, W. Kent, 12th July 1900. — A. H. Wolley-Dod. “I 
agree.” — David Fry. “Yes, correct.”— E. S. Marshall. 
Carum Petroselimnn , Benth. and Hook, f. In great profusion on 
the rocky debris on the slopes of Burnmouth Hill, facing the sea, 
Burnmouth, north-east Berwickshire, 18th July 1900. Doubtless a 
garden escape ; it is recorded as naturalised at several places in 
Berwickshire in Dr. George Johnston’s ‘Natural History of the 
Eastern Borders,’ vol. i., Botany, p. 85 (London, 1853 ). — Charles 
Bailey. 
C. Carvi , L. Ballast heaps near Aintree, S. Lancashire, July 
1900. — J. A. Wheldon. 
Pimpinella major , Huds., var dissecta, Druce, ‘FI. Oxfordshire,’ p. 
140; and of Fries’ sub P. magna , L. ; not of Retz. In Whistley 
Wood, Northamptonshire, September 1900. More common than the 
type. It also occurred with rose-coloured flowers, var. rosea , Steven, 
in DC. ‘Prod.’ — G. Claridge Druce. 
