PIAR 
1913] Fernald,— Indigenous Varieties of Prunella vulgaris 183 
eastern Quebec to North Carolina, west to Minnesota and lowa; 
Wyoming; Mexico. Naturalized from Europe. 
Forma ALBIFLORA (Bogenhard) Britton, Bull. Torr. Bot. Cl. xvii. 
125 (1890) as Brunella. Prunella vulgaris, var. albiflora Bogenhard, 
Fl. Jena, 315 (1850).— Rare. Seen by me only from Brookline, 
Massachusetts, August 6, 1885, Faxon. Naturalized from Europe. 
Var. HísPIDA Benth. Lab. Gen et Sp. 417 (1834). P. hispida Benth. 
in Wall. Pl. As. Rar. i. 66 (1830). Brunella cinerea Raf. New Fl. pt. 2, 
30 (1837). P. vulgaris scaberrima Pollard € Ball, Proc. Biol. Soc. 
Wash. xiii. 134 (1900).— Dry woods from Kentucky and North 
Carolina to Florida and Louisiana. India and southern Europe. 
Var. lanceolata (Barton), n. comb. P. pennsylvanica Bigel. Fl. 
Bost. 149 (1814); Pursh, Fl. Am. Sept. ii. 411, in part (1814); Eaton, 
Man. ed. 2, 383 (1818); not Willd. Hort. Berol. t. ix (1804). P. 
vulgaris B pennsylvanica Nutt. Gen. ii. 37 (1818). P. vulgaris B lanceo- 
lata Barton, Fl. Phil. ii. 37 (1818) and Fl. N. A. ii. 69, t. 60 (1822). 
P. vulgaris y elongata Benth. Lab. Gen. et Sp. 417 (1834). P. vulgaris B 
major Hook. Fl. Bor.-Am. ii. 114 (1838).— This variety occurs in 
several color-forms. The typical plant illustrated by Barton has the 
bracts and calyces green and the corolla lavender or lilac-purple, but 
the corollas may be of quite deep purple tones. "This typical var. 
lanceolata has been examined as follows. NEWFOUNDLAND: moist 
woods near Salmonier River, August 26, 1894, Robinson & Schrenk, 
no. 72; talus slopes of the marble region between Mt. Musgrave and 
Humber Mouth, Bay of Islands, July 18, 1910, Fernald & Wiegand, 
no. 3926; damp thicket, Bay St. George, August 5-7, 1901, Howe & 
Lang, no. 1008 (passing to forma iodocalyx). QUEBEC: gravel beaches 
near mouth of Dartmouth River, August 26 & 27, 1904, Collins, 
Fernald & Pease; mossy bog, altitude 600 m., between the River Ste. 
Anne des Monts and Table-top Mountain, July 31, 1906, Fernald & 
Collins, no. 713; Little Métis, August 1, 1906, J. Fowler; recent 
clearing, Basin Island, Magdalen Islands, Fernald, Bartram, Long 
& St. John, no. 7964. Marne: fields, Orono, August 16, 1887, 
Fernald; South Poland, 1894, 1896, Kate Furbish; New HAMPSHIRE: 
roadside, Randolph, July 28, 1897, E. F. Williams; Crawford Notch, 
July 3, 1898, J. M. Greenman, no. 1013. Vermont: Manchester, 
June 30, 1898, M. A. Day, no. 133. MassacHusETTS: Malden, July, 
1880, R. Frohock; Oak Island, Revere, July 9, 1882, H. A. Young. 
CONNECTICUT: meadow and pasture, Southington, July 22, 1898, L. 
Andrews, no. 455. New York: Stony Creek Ponds, July 9, 1899, 
Rowlee, Wiegand & Hastings. PENNSYLVANIA: Buckhorn, Columbia 
Co., July 21, 1899, A. A. Heller. Wisconsin: Milwaukee, Lapham; 
St. "Croix Falls, July, 1899, Mrs. N. E. Baker. Kansas: wet places, 
Riley Co., August 6, 1895, J. B. Norton, no. 412. Montana: Ravalli, 
July 15, 1908, Mrs. Joseph Clemens. CoroRaADo: Mancos, June 23, 
1898, Baker, Earle & Tracy, no. 54; among willows, Steamboat 
Springs, Routt Co., July 20, 1903, L. N. Goodding, no. 1605. Uran: 
