REPORT FOR 1907. 
301 
H. umheUafum. L., var. near coronopifolinm (Bernh.). Road- 
side near Doddington, S. Lincoln, 14th August 1907. Much more 
hirsute than H. cor(mopiffllium usually is. — A ugustin Ley. Yes. — 
W. R. IyiNT(')N. Very good. — E. S. M. This differs from my 
English series of var. coronopifoUum^ which all have the more glabre- 
scent leaf character; but it is included in M. Arvet-Touvet’s 
description, “ feuilles glabrescentes on pubescentes-blanchatres en 
desspus.” Eries (‘Symb. Hist. Hier. ’ p-. 177), wrote '■'■folia suhtus 
glahresceiitia vel pnherulaf and altered this in his ‘ Ejiicrisis’ (p. 136') 
to '■'■ foliis puhescenii-incams.'" A hairy form would thus be included 
in the older descriptions. — E. E. L. 
H iimbellatum, Ij. Tenby, 5th Sept. 1907. At Mr. Ley’s 
suggestion I sent this to Mr. W. R. Linton labelled var. pauciflorum, 
Hartm., who replied, “I doubt this: I was over those sandhills 
some few years ago and considered the H. umbellatum only the 
type : you may find all stages from plants short one headed to full 
form. I think the reduced form is due to situation perhaps aided 
by sheep or rabbits.” — S. H. Bickham. Var. curium, Tdnton, just 
like some of the original Abersoch specimens. — E. E. L. 
H. umbellatum, L., var. paniculatum, Cariot? Origin, Nant 
Erancon, Carnarvon ; cult., August 28th 1907. Much disfigured 
by garden mildew. Styles dark greenish. Phyllaries all blunt. — 
Augustin Ley. Not v?oc. paniculatum, Cariot, with which I identi- 
fied Mr. Griffiths’ Bangor plant (‘B.E.C. Report,’ 1890, p. 3o6\ 
and which has green phyllaries (pale green when fresh). I do not 
know the hirsute Great Orme's Head plant, referred to under var. 
paniculaium, with the account of which Mr. Ley’s plant agrees 
pretty well. — E. E. T.,. 
Trachelium cceruleum, L. Naturalised on a wall in St. Peter’s, 
Guernsey, but doubtless only an escape from the neighbouring 
garden. July 1906. — G. Claridge Druce. 
Anaoallis ccerulea, Schreb. Waste ground. Canton. Cardiff, 
Sept. 1907. The petals are finely gland-fringed. — H. J. Riddels- 
DELL. Now known as A.fcemina, Mill. — Ed. 
Erythrea Centaurium, Pers., forma. Penhallow^ Moor, St. 
Newlyn East, West Cornwall, v.-c. i. 13th Aug. (with Mr. H. 
Groves) and 4th Sept. 1907. A much-branched densely-flowered 
form growing in a patch of 50 — 100 plants, with ordinary E. Cen- 
taurium and E. pulchella close by. The small plants resemble var. 
