424 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
This part describes 99 species, from Myosotis arvensis to Planiago 
maritinia. Veronica frnticulosa, L., is said to] liave been found on 
Ben Cruachan, Argyll, Ben Lawers, Craig Mhor, Glen Lochay, Mid 
Perth. ( Is our pink-flowered plant really this species “?) V. J 3 ec- 
cabunga has a var, tenerriina\ (Schmidt). V. Chamaedrys has var. 
procera, Willk., and var. incisa, G. Frol. The var. hirsuta (Hojik.) 
of V. officinalis, only previously recorded from Ayrshire, is said to 
occur in Surrey, Esse.x, Norfolk, and Perth. It is doubtful how- 
ever if these are identical with the Ayrshire jilant. Under Planiago 
niaritinia, a var. serpentini, Brand, is recorded from Ben Laoigh, 
Argyll, and from Snowdonia. .-Vlso Mr. Williams identifies without 
hesitation the plant from \\dddy Ikink, Durham, as P. alpina, L., 
which he reduces to a var. of P. niaritinia. The Prodronius will 
probably extend to 1,420 pages. 
Flora of Cornwall, being an account of the Flowering 
Plants and Ferns found in the County of Cornwall, including the 
Scilly Isles, by F. Hamilton Davey, F.L.S. F. Chcgwidden, Lower 
Market Street, Penrhyn, 1909, pp. ixxxviii, 570. This useful work 
on one of the most interesting counties in Britain has filled up an 
important gap in our county Floras, and Mr. Davey is to be con- 
gratulated at the completion of an e.xcellent work. 
Twenty species are said to occur in no other county in 
Britain, but Artemisia Stclleriana, an alien, also has been found by 
me in Forfar ; Pinguicula grandiflora was introduced to Cornwall, 
and the claims to indigenity of Narcissus odorus^\ Scabiosa 
niaritinia, Echiitm plantagineum, and Bromus maxinius too are 
open to considerable suspicion. 
Artemisia biennis, Willd., may be added for Par. 'I'he variety 
pandfolia, I 3 ruce, is wrongly given under Silenc latifolia, R. & B. ; 
it should be put under 6’. niaritinia. 
The Flora of Glamorgan, edited by our member, A. H. 
Trow, D.Sc., F.L.S. , Sect, ii., Calyciflorae ; Sect, iii., Corolliflorae, 
» W. B. Boyd writes to me that his Glen Lochay plant (referred to above) 
is only pink-flowered saxaiilis, and quite different from V. friitiadosa, which 
he has never seen native in Scotland. 
Our member, Mr. Evans, has visited the locality and believes it to have 
been certainly introduced ; he says it is not type odonis but the var. Itaninalis, 
llort. 
