INDEX TO SUPPLEMENT

PAGE
abietina (Russula),[712]
abruptus (Agaricus),[722]
Adirondackensis (Clitocybe),[715]
chrysenteron albocarneus (Boletus),[723]
cinnabarinus (Cantharellus),[719]
clypeolaria (Lepiota),[712]
corrugatus (Cortinarius),[720]
distans (Lactarius),[717]
Frostiana pallidipes (Amanita),[711]
granulatus albidipes (Boletus),[722]
haemorrhoidarius (Agaricus),[721]
var. fumosus,[722]
lauræ (Hygrophorus),[716]
maculosa (Clitocybe),[715]
Morgani (Lepiota),[711]
mushrooms, Raising at home,[724]
naucinoides (Lepiota),[713]
patuloides (Clitocybe),[714]
Publications,[709]
rugulosa (Russula),[717]
subpurpureus (Lactarius),[716]

Supplement

Amanita.

Amanita Frostiana pallidipes n. var. (See A. Frostiana, page [16].) In his report of the New York State Botanist for 1899, Prof. Charles H. Peck describes a new variety of Amanita Frostiana as follows:

The typical form of this species, which is common in our cool northern woods, has the pileus and annulus, and usually the stem also, of a yellow color, that of the pileus sometimes verging to orange. But in warmer and more open or bushy places forms occur in which the whole plant is whitish, but in other respects has the characters of the species. Sometimes the pileus is pale-yellow and the stem and annulus white. The warts are soft and flocculent, are sometimes numerous and persistent, and again are few or wanting. The form with yellow stem and annulus and yellow or orange pileus may be considered the typical form of the species, but forms having the stem and annulus pale or white may be designated as variety pallidipes. Peck, 53d Rep. N.Y. State Bot.

Undoubtedly POISONOUS. McIlvaine.

Lepiota.

Lepiota Morgani Pk. (See page [37].) The majority of mycophagists are immune to the poison of this species. Yet many cases of severe, but not fatal poisoning by it came within the writer’s knowledge during the season of 1900–1901.

A valuable report is contained in a letter from George B. Clementson, attorney, Lancaster, Wis.: