76 AMERICAN FERN JOURNAL 
several of the hart’s-tongue and transplanted them 
in my fern garden several times but the ferns would 
live about a year and then die. By bringing some 
of the soil from the station, I did succeed in getting 
one to grow two years for me. The Trichomanes grows 
in its wild habitat only three miles away and I brought 
some home and prepared a damp shady cave for it, 
yet it failed to grow for me. 
I derive much pleasure from my fern garden as I 
have many ferns growing near at hand for study, that 
otherwise I would have to go several miles to see. 
Lone Istanp, Awa. 
An Annotated List of the Pteridophytes of North- 
western Ontario—II 
0. E. JENNINGS 
OPHIOGLOSSALES 
25. OpHiogLossum vuLtGatum L. Not collected by 
us but reported as collected by Dawson at the extreme 
southwestern part of western Ontario, at the mouth of 
the Rainy River, Lake of the Woods.—Macoun. 
26. Borrycutum Lunaria (L.) Sw. This well dis- 
tributed northern species was reported by Macoun from 
Pic River, Lake Superior; Nipigon Bay; meadows at 
Camp Alexander, Nipigon River; and at various points 
on Lake Nipigon. Our collections were from: Heron 
Bay; two stations at Rossport; and Porphyry Island; 
all along Lake Superior. 
27. BorrYcHIUM ONONDAGENSE Underwood. Boggy 
trail near Grassy Lake, Thunder Cape. Reported here- 
tofore from New York, Northern Michigan, and Mon- 
tana, so that this station at Thunder Cape is probably 
the most northerly known. 
28. BorrycuHrum RaMosuM (Roth) Aschers. (B. ma- 
tricariaefolium A. Braun; B. neglectum Wood.) Re- 
