XLVIII. ROSACEA. 
[Rubus. 
678 
with strong thorns. Stipules hairy, long-setiferous. Panicles 
terminal, 6 in. long; branches 1 in. or less, stout velvety. Flowers 
•5 in. across. Sepals ovate-obtuse, white-silky inside, yellow-silky 
outside. Petals broad rounded about as long. Fruit red, sweet. 
Hab. Perak, Batang Padang valley 2000 ft. altitude (Wray). 
Distrib. Java, Sumatra. 
The broad leaves and large flowers distinguish this bramble from the 
others. 
(2) R. angulosus Focke, Bibl. Bot. 17, p. 90. 
Big sarmentose shrub armed with short hooked thorns, buff 
tomentose. Leaves ovate or rounded, cordate, 3- to 8-lobed, 
lobes acute, denticulate, sparsely hairy above; midrib, back of 
leaf and petioles buff-tomentose, thorny, blade 3-5 to 8 in. long, 
3 to 7 in. wide; petioles 1 to 3 in. long. Stipules pinnatifid, 
fimbriate. Flowers crowded in short axillary racemes to the 
branch ends. Bracts oblong, palmatifid hairy outside. Calyx 
yellow, silky; sepals triangular, lanceolate. Petals ovate erose- 
dentate nearly as long. Drupes small few, orange. Hab. Com- 
