96 THE BRITISH ROSES 
prickly. The stipules are glabrous or somewhat pubescent and 
glandular. The leaflets vary from suborbicular and rounded at 
from N.E. Yorks, Cheshire, W. Kent, Surrey, S. Hants, S. Devon, 
and EK. Cornwall. They had been variously labelled by their 
also the Cheshire plant referred to under the next species, but the 
others, which inelude other Surrey and Cheshire examples, are no 
cd. 
is species may be regarded as a variety of R. scabriuscula, 
having decidedly glandular leaflets, and quite glabrous styles. The 
leaflets are, as a rule, also broader and somewhat more hairy 
Rosa JUNDZILLIANA- 
Baker in Review of Brit. Roses, p. 21 (1864) (non Besser). 
“A vigorous bush with arching stem 5-6 feet high, and the 
ento i i 
sometimes with t or four slightly curved aciculi, and some- 
imes several small setaceous ones in addition. Peduncles and 
ovate elliptical calyx-tube densely acicular ; 
§-} in. long, ovate lanceolate, with the point not much lengthened 
out or dilated, mostly with 2-3 toothed leafy pinne on each side, 
toment é the edges, rough on the back with sete and 
aciculi, spreading out level after the petals fall, afterwards 
ascending. Petals pink, the flowers about the size of those of 
tals p 
fi. tomentosa. Styles thinly hairy. Fruit subglobose or broadly 
elliptical-urceolate, prickly or nearly naked, 3-2 in, deep by 2 in. 
broad, the sepals falling before it chanaes euleasan We? PY 2 
ion of course does not refer to Besser’s species, 
to a different subsection, but is taken from 
