502 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
the middle to a mucronate apex, the lower half slightly rounded, 
the upper surface a duller green, thinly silky when young, but nearly 
or quite naked when mature. Berries bright scarlet, turbinate | in. 
deep by ^ in. broad. Bird-sown on a British fort near Galashiels — 
Miss Hayward ; in wild heathy country near Aldershot — Mrs. Gibson, 
in lit. ; and in Oxford. G. Claridge Druce. 
X 991. Saxifr.aga Geum X HiRSUTA, Eiigler. See ‘ B.E.C.’ 
(1887), 1 8 1. From Connor Hill and Brandon Mt., collected by 
Rev. Augustin Ley, 1887. 
993 A. ■^■‘Saxifraga sarmentosa, Linn. f. China. [Bonny 
Crag, ‘ Bot. Soc. Ed.’ 249, 1876.] 
993 ter. pedatifida, Sm. ‘Journ. Bot.’ (1883), 152, 
181, ‘B.E.C.’ 1882, 72.] 
993 ^[S. Andrewsii, Haw. ‘ B.E.C.’ (1882), 72.] 
1006 ter. Tillaea pharnaceoides, Hochst. Trop. Afr. [Gala- 
foot, 79], 1910. J. Fraser, in lit. 
1017 Hs. Sedum lydium, Boissier Diagn. Ser. i. 3, p. 17. 
Glabrum cespitosum caudiculis repentibus, caulibus ascendentibus, 
sterilibus abbreviatis dense foliosis, foliis linearibus obtusis, cyma 
corymbose - capitata radiis brevissimis densifloris scorpioideis, 
pedicellis calyce brevioribus, petalis roseis lanceolatis obtusiusculis 
calycis laciniis oblongis obtusis subduplo longioribus. Perennial. 
Boiss., “ FI. Oriens,” ii. 782. In some plenty by the stream at 
the base of a wall at Clovenfords, Selkirk, and well established ; 
discovered by Miss Ida Hayward and the Secretary in 1909. In 
1910 it was much injured by alterations to the wall. The plant is 
very conspicuous in late summer by the rich crimson tint of its 
foliage. A native of Lydia and Mount Cadmo, &c. It has been 
introduced by Horticulturists, and as it is cultivated in gardens at 
Clovenfords its origin is explained. 
Gen. 205 bis. '^'Blumenbachia, Schrader in Goett. Gel. 
Anz., 1705, 1825. 
1075 ins. ■*'B. insignis, Schrader. Chili, Argentina. [On 
rubbish at Marston Brickyards, Oxford, 1909.] G. Claridge 
Druce. 
