REPORT FOR I909. 
$ 
469 
A. B. Jackson and W. B. Turrill. A most beautiful set. — S. H. 
Bickham. 
Lamium amplexicaule, L. With cleistogamous flowers. Lea- 
sowe, Cheshire, May, 1908. — E. Drabble. 
La?nium maculatum, L. Quite naturalized upon an old wall 
at Meole Brace, Salop, v.-c. 40, June, 1909. — J. Cosmo Melvill. 
Flantago lanceolata, L., var. sphaerostachya^ M. and K. Lime- 
stone rocks, Moel Horaddug, near Cwm, Flint, v.-c. 51, July 3, 
1909. — J. A. Wh ELDON. Yes. Will any one cultivate this as a 
check experiment ? The older botanists said it reverted to type. 
I doubt its being a true variety. — G. C. Druce. These plants 
look thoroughly starved j I suspect that the alleged variety is 
nothing more than a state of situation. — E. S. Marshall. Yes, 
good for the variety, I should say. — C. E. Salmon and F. N. 
Williams. 
Corrigiola litloralis, Linn. Slapton Sands, S. Devon, v.-c. 3, 
Aug. 13, 1909.— A. H. Wolley-Dod. 
Chenopodium urbicum^ Linn., var. intermedium, Moq. — A. H. 
W.-Dod. Treludderow, St. Newlyn East, West Cornwall, v.-c. r. 
Sept. 25 and Oct. i, 1909. — C. C. Vigurs. Yes. — A. Ley. 
Salicornia ramosissima, Woods, forma. Salt marsh, between 
Dymchurch and New Romney, Kent, September 12, 1909. Deter- 
mined by Dr. Moss and the Rev. E. S. Marshall. — J. Cosmo 
Melvill. 
Rumex limosus, Thuill. Eye Green, Northants, v.-c. 32, Sept., 
1909. — N. C. R., G. C. Druce. 
Aristolochia Ciematiiis, L. By a ditch near Godstow, Oxon, 
v.-c. 23, Aug. 2, 1909. (locus classicus) a relic of cultivation. — 
A. B. Jackson and G. C. Druce. 
Euphorbia Cyparissias, Linn. Walton Downs, Surrey, v.-c. 17, 
May 16, 1909. Seen when in company with Mr. C. E. Salmon in 
this locality. Here, among the gorse, the Spurge is quite abundant 
in one spot. I suppose this species must be an introduction here, 
having regard to its accepted status in most of its reported localities. 
There are no houses in the vicinity, from the gardens of which it 
may have been an outcast. The chief objection against it being a 
genuine native on Walton Downs lies in the fact that a plant so 
conspicuous when in flower woukl surely have attracted attention 
