138 AMERICAN FERN JOURNAL 
in the “Gorge” from Glen Onoko to White Haven. To 
one of these, a mile or more up the river and-high up the 
hill, we made our way. Mountain spleenwort (Asplenium 
montanum Willd.) grows in the vicinity of the glen as well 
_as at several places in the vicinity of Lehigh Gap, so that 
it was not unreasonable to predict its occurrence on these 
cliffs. It was there, as we expected; but climbing down 
to a shelf of rock, Walter Mattern, who was leading, : 
gave a little exclamation which the writer, looking over 
his shoulder, all but echoed, for there, flattened up against 
a side of the cliff facing north, was a fern new to us. It 
could be none other but Bradley’s spleenwort, and so it 
_ proved to be. ‘The writer found another plant near by. 
_ The fact of its occurrence having been established, only 
is not unlikely, and the writer — later to confirm = 
prediction. © 
For the sake of seu ‘ie station for Aspienien, 
Bradleyi D. ©. Eaton! is here given as ‘‘On outcrops of 
-ocono sandstone on Broad mountain along the Lehigh — 
-ver north of Glen Onoko, Carbon county, Pa., altitude 
a 1 aH feet, — 8, sea, W. Me att n 
nd H. ¥ 55). 
pert 
