128 PITTONIA. 
17. V. LANCEOLATA, Linn. Sp. Pl. 934. For this no 
herbarium specimens are cited in the Metaspermx ; but there 
are three sheets now present; one from Hennepin Co., by 
Sandberg in 1890, another from Anoka Co., 1894, by W. 
D. Frost. The third sheet has an incomplete label, without 
locality or date. The indications are, therefore, that the 
species belongs to the southeasterly section of the State only. 
18. V. BLANDA, Willd. Hort. Berol. t. 24. This white 
violet of open swampy meadows seems to occur in the south- 
eastern part of the State; though how commonly it is not 
easy to judge from the material, much of which is so poor 
as to appear ambiguous between this species and the next; 
but there are two sheets by Sandberg from Goodhue Co., 
and one by Sheldon from the Mille Lacs Reservation that 
are indubitably V. blanda. 
19. V. Leconrzana, Don. Gen. Syst. i. 324. A wood- 
land violet, larger than V. blanda and more freely stolonif- 
erous, with larger corollas, but the petals narrow, seems 
common enough throughout the more easterly sections of 
Minnesota both north and south. There are some eighteen 
sheets which I refer to it. 
20. V. RENIFOLIA, Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. viii. 288. 
This has been collected in Carlton Co., by Sandberg, the 
specimens in flower only, and at Vermilion Lake, St. Louis 
Co., by J. C. Arthur and L. H. Bailey, in fruit. It is of the 
Lake Superior region, therefore, and perhaps not uncom- 
mon there. 
21. V. Brainerpu, Greene, Pitt. v. 89. Of this re- 
cently proposed segregate there is a fair showing in the 
Minnesota collection, and the range is the same indicated 
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