378 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
Hieracium reticulatiim, Lindeb. Cliffs, Reay, Caithness, 2nd August, 
1892. — W. A. Shoolbred. “Correct.” — F. J. Hanbury. The Rev. 
W. R. Linton thought his specimen to be H. auraium^ Fries. 
H. umbellatum^ L. f. laiifoliiwi^ Flanb. Near Bangor, August, 
1892. — J. E. Griffith. 
Hypochceris glabra, L. Sandy field, east of Rillington, S.E. York, 
Sep., 1892. — George Webster. “A new record for the county of 
York, the records of “ 63 and 64 ” in Top. Bot. being more than 
doubtful; see Lees ‘FI. W. Yorkshire,’ p. 299.” — Arth. Bennett. 
The type plant with the outer achenes destitute of a beak. The 
var. arachnoides Coss. et. Germ., with all the achenes beakless has 
not yet been recorded as British — G. C. Druce. 
Sonchus palustris, L. Reed bed below Woolwich, Kent, 17th 
August, 1892. — A. H. Wolley-Dod. See ‘ Journ. Bot.,’ 1892, p. 153. 
Tragopogon pratensis, I., var. grandiflorus, Syme.” Railway 
bank. Burton Green, Warwickshire, June, 1892.— H. Bromwich. 
A single specimen lacking the lower portion of the stem of T. orientalis, 
L, The exterior fruits being bristly and the flowers retaining their 
bright yellow colour after drying. Giinther Beck makes this a var. 
of T. prateyisis in ‘ FI. Siidbosnien,’ p. 167. — G. C. Druce. 
Jasione montana, L. var. Sandhills, Wallasey, Cheshire, i8th 
August, 1892. — J. A. Wheldon. I do not see that this is a variety, 
it is very different from the plants distributed through the Club as 
var. littoralis, Fries. — G. C. Druce. 
Trachelium cairuleum, L. On very high wall, outskirts of St. Peter’s 
Port, Guernsey, i6th August, 1892. Com. — J. Cosmo Melvill. 
Discovered by Mr. Archibald Buchanan Brown, 1892. See ‘Journ. 
Bot.,’ November, 1892, p. 346. 
Arctostaphylos alpina, Spreng. Ben Eay, N. Ross., July, 1889. 
G. C. Druce. 
Erica AHackayi, Hook. Craig-a-more, near Roundstone, Con- 
nemara, 27th August, 1892. Legit. B. King; comm. — H. C. 
Levinge. “ Mr. Levinge adopts the cabalistic ‘ Hk.,’ which may 
stand for Haskarl, as well as Hooker and others.” — Arthur Bennett. 
I think Hooker spelled this Mackaii in ‘Comp, to Bot. Mag.,’ it;8, 
1835.— G. C. Druce. 
Statice Limonium, pyramidalis, Syme. Wells, Norfolk, 23rd 
August, 1892. — Coll. F. Long. The variety grows with the type, 
but it does not come into full flower for at least three weeks to 
a month later. — H. D. Gelbart. Syme refers this to the S. 
Liinonmm, a, genuina ; Boiss. in ‘ DC. Prod.’ — at present I have 
not been able to see a specimen named by Boissier ; but from my 
own observations in Kent, I am strongly inclined to agree with 
Syme in thinking that it is the more or less dryness of the saltmarsh 
that produces the var. Syme considers the serotina, Reich., to be the 
A. Limonium, v. macroclada, Boiss., and different from the above plant ; 
while he refers the serotina of Gren. and Godr. ‘ FI. France ’ to the 
Norfolk plant.” — Arthur Bennett. 
Erythraca littoralis. Fries., var. 7 ninor, Hartm. Inver bay, near 
Tain, E. Ross, i6th July, 1891. — E. S. Marshall. The plant I 
