Be AMERICAN FERN JOURNAL 
_ seems to be proof conclusive that these forms are to be 
- expected at any station where the typeisfound. It was, 
- indeed, a red-letter day when the writer found two 
_ fronds of what was afterwards determined as Poly- 
podium vulgare v. ovatum (Moore). The long stipe 
_ and rather short blade, the graceful curve of the frond, 2 
_ the long tapering pinne, with their sinuate margins, | = 
with the background furnished by the mellow sunshine — 
_ of a September day, formed a picture that will hang for 
_ Many years on memory’s wall. 
Among the forms are found elongata (H. W. Jewell), 
3 ulsAdare (Moore), —— (Moore), sinuatum, with 
: all, of the pinne sinua' 
a A station was found: last fall (1909), ‘under the low- ae 
oie eer keeer Sabine eRe AEE he Sel ees As 
< phiect | in ee press, for wells we isew that the. paschul . 
_ ‘Tuffles would be ruined. This form was not confined — 
toa few fronds, but there were hundreds of them, and 2 
no frond of the type was found with them. : 
- "Perhaps the most interesting find of any form of the 
“species in this state was a made last August by Mrs. A.B 2 
-oullar at Standish. be bifido-cristatum. __ 
Dmuery describes it as follows: oy Long, narrow, robust, _ 
ted; its short leaflets are fanned out at the pe 
! esate crests, —e frond. he Jeacrueonde estes, i 
