478 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
Rubus radiila, Weihe, var. echinatoides, Rogers. ( i ) Bush on the road 
to the Falls of Barwick, near Crieff, Mid. Perth, 3rd October, 1894. 
(2) Above the bridge, Hexham, S. Northumberland, 20th July, 1894. 
(3) Tramway-side, at base of debris, Penrhyn Slate Quarries, near 
Bethesda, N.E. Carnarvonshire, 27th September, 1895. Collected, 
all, by Charles Bailey. “ Not quite what I mean by my variety, 
any of them, though allied forms, (i) Intermediate between type and 
var. echinatoides, though nearer to the latter. (2) Like some forms 
of N. Wales and Mid England, with leaves mostly 3-nate and ashy- 
felted beneath, which I think best placed under this variety. (3) A 
very singular form which looks intermediate between R. infestus, 
(Weihe) and R. cambricus (F'ocke) (in Griffith, ‘FI. Angl. and Cam.’ 
p. 46), though also in some respects recalling a form of echinatoides 
which I saw growing at Bethesda with those two species in 1894.” — 
W. M. R. 
R. Gelertit, Frider., var, criniger, Linton, E. F, Linton. Hedge in 
Glen Turret, near Crieff, Mid Perth, 2nd October, 1894. — Charles 
Bailey. “ This seems to me a form of R. radula, differing from the 
type (and so far approaching R. criniger) only in the rather less mixed 
armature of the very hairy panicle, and perhaps the somewhat greyer 
or greenish-grey tint of the leaves (due, I think, to the specimens 
having been gathered in Oct.) In file-like subglabrous stem, in shape 
of leaflets, and in the lax pyramidal panicle narrowing to the top, it is 
indistinguishable from typical R. radiila, Weihe, which I have not 
hitherto seen from Mid. Perth.” — W. M. R. 
R. podophyllus, P. J. Muell. Cwm Bychan, Merioneth 9th Aug., 
1895. — W. R. Linton. “ These specimens represent what I regard 
as the average Welsh form of this species. N. England plants seem 
usually more strongly armed.” — W. M. R. 
R. foliostis, W. & N. Charlesworth, Derby, 23rd August, 1894. — 
W. R. Linton. “ I believe certainly R. podophyllus, P. J. Muell., in 
spite of some features which recall small forms of R. foliosusP — 
W. M. R. 
R. oigoclados, Muell. and Lefv., var. Newbouldii, Bab., “fide E. F. 
Linton. Less glandular than usual, teste W. M. Rogers.” Crooked 
Wood, Co. Westmeath, 6th Aug., 1895. — H. C. Levinge. Also 
specimens from same locality, collected 27th July, 1895, by E. F. and 
W. R. Linton. “ The roundish (or at most bluntly angled) stem, with 
few and rather small prickles, recalls the Devon and Herefordshire plant 
for which Dr, Focke has suggested the name oigodados. In other 
respects {e.g. broader softer leaflets and more compound panicle with 
longer laxer hair on rachis) the Westmeath plant agrees better with 
what I am calling NewbouldiiP — W. M. R. 
R. rudis, W. and N. Open coppice, Nuthurst, Sussex, 15th July, 
1895, New County record. The plant grows in at least two widely 
separated localities. — Jas. W. White. “Yes.” — W. M. R. 
