VIOLACEAE 893 
35. canadensis L. Stems usually 3-4 dm. high, minutely pubescent: 
leaf- blades cordate-ovate, pointed, serrate; ders sharply lanceolate: 
slender, acuminate, spre ading: late eral petals bea 
at the ba ase and striped with fine dark lines: 
long, often ei or puberulent: seed brown.— 
VIOLET.) oods, various provinces, N of Coastal Plain, S. c to ro 
Sask., Ont., aaa. "N. B. 
36. V. striata Ait. 
e 
: stipules large, elliptic-lanceolate: 
corolla white or c T , 4-6 mm 
long: seed light-brown.—(CREAM-VIOLET.)—Low woods an hickets, various 
provinces, rarely Coastal Plain, Ga. to Mo., Minn., and Con 
V. conspersa Reichenb. Rootstock oblique, often much branched: 
at time of vernal flowering, 8-16 em. high: lower leaf -blades cordate- RIT 
obtuse, the upper ones cordate-ovate, erenate, sub m. 
wide: flowers n j 
1 
i own.— (AME ow grounds and 
shaded banks, various SIND. Coastal Plain only N, Ga. to Minn., Que., 
and Me. 
38. V. Walteri House. Plant finely puberulent: ee a at first 
oe lea ng 
o 
tly 
in ee ins, 2—4 em. wide: stipules bri eel fimbriata, 6-10 mm 
: capsule purplish, ovoid- -globose, 6 m ong: seed [V. mu ti- 
is (T. & G.) Britton] "04 No gd. and moist E Te. various 
provinces, Fla. to Tex., Ky., and S. C. 
39. V. rostrata dei Stems often numerous, common ly 1-2 dm 
o broadly ovate, cordate, near 
ED-VIOLET. ‘Low VIO un pen hillsides . and rieh woods, 
various provinees, N oË Coastal Plain, Ga. to Ala., Mich., Que. and Pa. 
. Rafine 
d 
exposed hillsides, elds, various 
provinces, Ga. to Tex., Mich., and N. Y.—The roots have a wintergreen scent. 
