179 
REPORT FOR 1905, 
(39) 
Bickham. Mr. Bickham did not desire to publish a Note on this 
alien, but from its examination a point arose that it may be in- 
structive to comment upon. At first I doubted if the name were 
correct, being led by Babington’s description to conclude that 
L. ciliata should have 15 stamens, “filaments 10 free 5 sterile.” 
But on conferring with Mr. Marshall he drew my attention to the 
figure and description in ‘Syme, E. B.’ with which Mr. Bickham’s 
plant exactly agrees. The stamens are really 10, — 5 with anthers 
and 5 abortive, the former connected at the base, the latter reduced 
to minute triangular points. The ‘ Manual ’ is somehow at fault, 
I think possibly by the omission of a figure and a comma. — Ed. 
Gentiana germanica^ Willd. Some luxuriant specimens from 
Penley Wood, Bucks, Sept. 1904. The locality was formerly in- 
cluded in Oxfordshire, it is put in Bucks in the new maps. — 
G. Claridge Druce. 
Linaria supina, Desf. Par, East Cornwall, v.-c. 2, 24th May 
1905. I have found this plant also near Newquay in v.-c. i, but 
apparently it is not obtaining a good hold. — C. C. Vigurs. 
Linaria repens x vulgaris ? Bank, near Farningham, W. Kent, 
7 th August 1905. From the same station as the specimens sent 
to the Club by us in 1880. We presume it is the hybrid, but have 
not seen Z. repeats in the neighbourhood. The record for that 
species from Farningham, in the ‘ Flora of Kent,’ is an error. — 
H. and J. Groves. “ Doubtless right.” — Edw. S. Marshall. 
Yes, about two-thirds repens, but the absence of the species is 
remarkable. — G. C. Druce. 
Scrophularia aquatica, L., ^ cinerea, Dum. Pond-side, Under- 
down, Ledbury, 25th June 1905. — S. H. Bickham. “I agree; 
/3 cinerea is the usual British form.” — E. F. Linton. 
Mimulus Langsdorjii, Don., var. guttatus. Quite established 
for some miles along the Couglass Burn, Banff, in some places 
in great abundance and forming fine masses of colour, 15th July 
1^05. — W. A. Shoolbred. “Yes, but (DC.) should follow the 
varietal name, and Donn is the authority for the species.” — 
G. C. Druce. 
Euphrasia brevipila, Burn, and Gremli. Llanbadarn Marsh, 
Aberayron, and Parson’s Bridge, Cardiganshire, June 1904 and 
June 1905, coll. Dr. J. H. Salter ; and Strata Florida Abbey, 
Cardiganshire, 5th July 1905.— W. H. Painter. “Right; a form 
with broad, bluntly-toothed leaves.”— Edw. S. Marshall. 
E. Rostkoviana, Hayne. Parson’s Bridge, Cardigan, June 
