18 AMERICAN FERN JOURNAL 
Angeles, Cal. So far, five eight page numbers have 
been issued. 
A New VERMONT STATION FOR ASPLENIUM EBEN- 
oIpES. We, my wife and I, began fern hunting last 
Summer (1915). We spent the month of Julv at 
No. Ferrisburg, Vt.—Mt. Philo Inn. This summer 
(1916) we decided to stay there during July and August 
because we agreed with Mr. H. G. Rugg that ‘‘ Vermont 
is the Fern Lovers’ Paradise.” 
Two miles east of Mt. Philo, in the southeastern 
corner of Charlotte is Scott’s Mill, and just above this 
mill runs a wooded range of hills. On the western slope 
of this range, Mrs. Breckenridge had the good fortune 
to find, on July 29, two fine plants of Asplenium eben- 
oides. 
We picked four fronds, one that had evidently sur- 
vived the Winter. They were from 5 to 7 inches long 
and each one gave unmistakable evidence of its parentage. 
_ Near by, growing in profusion, was Camptosorus 
rhizophyllus also at least twenty-five specimens of 
Asplenium platyneuron. These plants we had discovered 
last summer, and we went to the station determined 
to find our Scott’s Spleenwort. I wonder if the name 
of that mill helped any. 
L. P. BRECKENRIDGE. 
Mr. A. W. Brown sends in some additions to Dr. Bene- 
dict’s list of Adirondack ferns, recently published in the 
JouRNAL. “T was there” he writes “in August of this 
year and last and, like Dr. Benedict, found so many 
attractions that I did not look very closely for specimens, 
but can add to the list Struthiopteris germanica, Botry- 
chium obliquum and Dryopteris marginalis (on Bald 
Mountain). The region does not seem specially rich 
5 jesse se 
ne ae avg 
