46 AMERICAN FERN JOURNAL 
station and have introduced many useful plants and trees; 
and we have established schools for the benefit of rich 
and poor, and have given the citizens a voice in their own 
government. Complaints sometimes reach the papers, 
which point to discontent among the islanders; but these 
may often be traced to disappointed politicians seeking 
public office, or to taxpayers who expected all taxation to © 
cease after the American occupation of the island. They 
now ask for the privilege of United States citizenship or 
autonomy. It remains for us to convince them that we 
have the real interests of all the islanders at heart, and 
that every official act is for the lasting benefit of Porto : 
Rico. 
_ Lycopodium selago from Ohio 
LEWIS S. HOPKINS 
ort : nies trip was made to Dundee, Tusea- 
0., Ohio, in the early part of August 1911. While 
a the sandstone rocks for Lycopodium pore 
phikem Lloyd « Und., which grows here rather spon 
ve cm. a 
profusio — which form 
> ZONES, 
