INOW Aa FLOWERING PLANTS AND FERNS 201 
Lechea villosa Ell. (L. major Michx.) Hairy Pinweed. 
Dry thin soil. Hinds Co.; Cat Island (Tracy). May. 
Geol. Sur. Herb. 
Lechea tenuifolia Michx. Narrow-Leaf Pinweed. 
Dry, open, sterile soil throughout the state. Oxford; 
Hinds Co. September. 
Geol. Sur. Herb. 
Lechea Torreyi Leggett (lL. racemulosa Hook.) Torrey’s Pin- 
weed. 
Dry sands along the coast. Horn Island (Mohr). June. 
VIOLACEAE. Violet Family. 
VIOLA L. Violet. 
Viola pedata L. Bird’s Foot Violet. 
Dry open copses, mostly in upland regions of sandy soil. 
Seems never to be found in loess regions. Tishomingo Co.; 
sandy uplands of Attala Co.; eastern Lafayette Co.; Tippah 
Co.; in flatwoods near Scooba, Neshoba Co.; dry clay soils of 
Seott Co. April-May. 
Geol. Surv. Herb. Allison Herb. 
Viola pedata bicolor Pursh. Bi-Colored Bird’s Foot Violet. 
This variety has been found in Mississippi only in sandy 
uplands of northeastern Tippah county. April-May. 
Geol. Surv. Herb. 
Viola palmata L. Blue Wood-Violet. 
In open woods throughout the state. The commonest up- 
land violet in the loess region. Oxford; Hinds Co.; Tisho- 
mingo Co; Carrollton; Woodville; Meadville; Ocean Springs 
' (Tracy). May. 
Geol. Sur. Herb. 
Viola vicinalis Greene. Large-Flowered Violet. 
Common in the dry pine barrens. Jones Co.; Bay St. 
Louis (Allison); Biloxi (Tracy). April-May. 
