642 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
A. Wheldon. Near Barlborough, and near Woolley, Ashover Hay, 
Derbyshire. — W. R. Linton. 
Euphrasia Kerneri, Wettst. On short turf on open chalk downs, 
near Banstead, Surrey, 10th September 1900. — F. Townsend. 
E. curta , Fries. Grassy banks and cliffs near the sea, west of 
Melvich, Sutherlandshire. T2th-i3th August 1897. — F. Townsend. 
Near the Peacock Inn, N. Derbyshire, 1st August 1899. — W. R. 
Linton. 
E. curta, Fries., var. glabrescens , Wettst. Sheep pastures above 
Beoraidbeg, near the Cemetery, Morar, Invernesshire, July 1899. — 
F. Townsend. Sea banks near Little Bispham, W. Lancashire, July 
1900. New record for v.-c 60. — J. A. Wheldon. 
E. latifolia , Pursh. Scullemie, Tongue Bay, v.-c. 108, W. Suther 
land, 21th July 1900. — E. S. Marshall. 
E. foulaensis. Towns. Ben Loyal, v.-c. 108, W. Sutherland, 7th 
August 1900. — E. S. Marshall. 
E. scottica , Wettst. (E. paludosa , Towns., non R. Br.). Wet, boggy 
moors east of and near Poolewe, Rossshire, 23rd August 1897. — 
F. Townsend. 
Mentha . Strata Florida, Cardiganshire, September 1900. — 
H. J. Riddelsdell. “ M. sativa, L., more hairy than usual.’’ — J. G. 
Baker. 
M. gentilis, I,. On both sides of the Wye, i.e., in Hereford and 
West Gloucester, September 1900, at Symond’s Yat, near the Great 
Howard. To which variety does it belong? In the ‘Flora of 
Hereford.’ p. 225, both the type and var. JVirtgeniana are recorded.— 
G. Claridge Druce. “ I have likewise gathered this plant on the 
Wye. It agrees very well with JVirtgeniana, except that the stem is 
rather more hairy than usual.” — D. Fry. “Yes.” — J. G. Baker. 
M. gentilis, Linn., var. Hachenbruchii , Briquet. A cultivated 
plant in the garden of Ashfield, Whalley Range, Manchester; flowering 
and rooting specimens, nth August 1900; fruiting specimens, 1st 
September 1900. I have distributed this plant years ago as M. 
gracilis, Sm., b. cardiaca, Baker, but Dr. John Briquet, of Geneva, tells 
me it is quite different from cardiaca, and is the rare variety named 
above. Dr. Briquet has been examining the whole of my British 
mints, in view of the monograph he has in preparation on this genus, 
and when all the mateiial is returned there will be many identifications 
to report, as most of my British specimens reached me from members 
of the Exchange Club. — Charles Bailey. 
Calamintha parvifolia, Lam. (C. Nepeta, Clairv.; Clinopodium 
Nepcta, Kuntze). Plentiful near Seer Green, Bucks, September 
1900. — G. C. Druce. 
