560 THE BOTANICAL EXCHANGE CLUB OF THE BRITISH ISLES. 
difficult to say what it really is. — A. H. Wolley-Dod. Doubtful, 
I think. This has the fruit less well developed on August 9 or 29 
than the last on July 6; and yet both are supposed to belong to 
the Sherardi {omissa) group. — W. Barclay. 
Hosa suberecia, Ley., varietas foliis subtus eglandulosis. Clearly 
to be placed under this rose, the leaves of which are usually 
highly glandular, but here almost or quite eglandular except on 
the midrib. This form was abundant in the neighbourhood (Mar- 
dale, Hartsop, and Patterdale) ; but the typical plant also occurred. 
Major Wolley-Dod agrees. — Augustin Ley. Correct. — A. H. 
Wolley-Dod. Leaflets apparently eglandular on both surfaces, 
as are the fruits and pedicels ; but the petioles, leaf-margins, and 
sepals have a fair amount of glands, so that the expression is not 
quite accurate. — Edward S. Marshall. The material is scarcely 
good enough to form a safe judgment. I have never seen any 
form of tomentosa (agg.) with fruit anything like so well developed 
on July 6. Even for mollis it would be early. Red colouring and 
strongly armed petioles are given by Mr. Ley as marks almost 
constant of Ids suberecia. Here there is no red colouring, and 
the petioles are quite unarmed except in the case of one or two. — 
W. Barclay. 
Rosa , Sp. Hunstanton Downs, July ii, 1910. Appears 
to be a variation of R. micrantha, Sm., with somewhat highly 
coloured flowers. — W. Barclay. 
Rosa hibernica, Templeton. At foot of basaltic escarpment, 
Bellair Hill, near Carnlough, County Antrim. This is a new 
locality for this species. There are several bushes of it, but it is 
not plentiful. R. spinosissima grows near by. — C. H. Waddell. 
Not R. hibernica.! Tempi., which has hairy leaflets, but another 
member of \h& Pwipinellifolice y. Ru-ca7iince. In foliage it matches 
var. Grovesii, Baker, but the fruit is very different, on my specimen 
at least, being no doubt abortive, very small, and globose, instead 
of rather large and decidedly urceolate. I should however place 
it to var. Grovesii provisionally. — A. H. Wolley-Dod. Under 
var. glabra. Baker, leaves glabrous, eglandular, simply serrate ; 
sepals loosely reflexed on the solitary fruit of my specimen ; arma- 
ture less mixed than usual. Probably R. canma, type {i.e., lutetuvia, 
or near it) x spinosissima, forma pwipinellifolia, as the pedicel is 
eglandular. — Edward S. Marshall. Yes, var. glabra. Baker. — 
W. Barclay. 
R. Sabini, Woods, [ref. No. 2]. Quarry spoil banks, Straid- 
killy, Carnlough, County Antrim, August 18, 1910. — C. H. Waddell. 
Of the group pwipinellifolice x villosce certainly, and nearest R, Sabmi, 
