138 THE BRITISH ROSES 
An entirely revised list of county records will be required. 
Until there is more certainty as to what names our forms should 
bear, it will be difficult, if not impossible, to make a satisfactory 
list of their comital distribution. I have not been able therefore, 
to keep more than a very few. To judge from specimens I have 
seen at South Kensington labelled as new county records, man 
of those hitherto noted have been based upon most doubtful and 
] 
some upon quite wrongly named material. 
grown, as p 
special attention to the soil. Miss Willmott will be glad to 
receive cutting of any named segregates, especially of the Villose, 
though any would be acceptable. 
In addition to a considerable number of the Eu-canine which 
are being grown in the Warley Gardens, I am de ositing in the 
National Herbarium at South Kensington duplicates of the Roses 
have collected during the past two years. Jt is hoped that 
others will do the same, so that in time a good representative 
collection will be made of our British forms, both growing and 
in the herbarium. It should be pointed out, however, that un- 
ed examples, or those labelled with an aggregate name only, 
are of little value. 
