there is a high cliff or bluff made up of fine 



store of interesting fossils. 



In passing by this cliff our attention was a 

 horticulturists would doubtless call a gia 



plant before found in F 



The Juniata Valley is rich in flowering plants. Its floristics 

 would furnish a fascinating field for study, and, if properly in- 



polypody (Polypodium vulgare), lady-fern (Athyrium Fili: 



wood-fern (Dryopteris marginalis), flower-cup fern (Woods 

 obtusa) and hay-scented fern {Dennstaedtia punctilobula) . 



year— goldenrods were blooming and asters were beginning 

 ' eriflorus and the mo 





:r of si 



