2 AMERICAN FERN JOURNAL 
L. alopecuroides had been overlooked in this bog, which 
has been known to botanists for several years, is doubt- 
less due to its development late in the season, at which 
time the bog had probably not been visited by collectors. 
The nearest previous locality for this species is, appar- 
ently, that listed by McAtee* for Newcastle County, 
Delaware. 
Lycopopium aurinum L. Though known in North 
America from the Gaspé region of eastern Quebec, from 
abundant material collected in Alaska, and from a few 
specimens collected as far south as the Revelstoke re- 
gion of British Columbia (Shaw 40, 894, 959 in part), 
this species appears not to be recognized as occurring 
within the United States. The present record relates 
to excellent fruiting specimens collected in the vicinity 
of Snyder Lake, Glacier National Park, Montana, at an 
altitude of about 1,500 meters, August 23, 1919, by Mr. 
Paul C. Standley (no. 17957), while engaged in gather- 
ing material for a descriptive flora of the Park. The 
plants, which were remarked as being of a very pale 
color, were collected at the edge of a rock slide, under 
blueberries. Specimens from Mount Paddo, Washing- 
ton, have been distributed under this name by Mr. 
Suksdorf, but the material so labeled proves to be L. 
sitchense Rupr. 
Potystichum JENNINGSI Hopkins. Among other 
interesting ferns brought back from Glacier National 
Park, Montana, by Mr. Standley are two numbers of 
Polystichum which seem to bridge the supposed gap be- 
tween P. Jenningsi and P. Andersoni Hopkins, whose 
status was recently discussed by the writer.» They are: 
Standley 17443, collected in an alder thicket near a brook, 
along the lower part of the trail from Many Glacier Hotel 
to Piegan Pass, at an altitude of about 1,500 meters; and - 
‘Bull. Biol, Soc. ane is si 1918 
‘Amer. Fern Journ. 8: 33-37. 1918. 
