84 
Mycologia 
Known only from three small sporophores collected by Mrs. 
Anthony in grassy ground at Gouverneur, New York, in Septem- 
ber. The cap is pale-brown when fresh and the gills become 
brownish. The dried specimens are now not easy to compare, 
but I cannot definitely connect them with any other known species. 
5. Vaginata albocreata (Atk.) 
Agaricus nivalis Peck, Ann. Rep. N. Y. State Mus. 33 : 48. 1883. 
Not Agaricus nivalis Grev. 1823. 
Amanitopsis albocreata Atk. Jour. Myc. 8: iii. 1902. 
This species is represented by a number of specimens in the 
Cornell University Herbarium, and at Albany the peculiar volval 
differences between it and V. plnmbea alba are well shown. It is 
reported from New York to Alabama. 
6. Vaginat.\ f.vrinosa (Schw.) Murrill, Mycologia 4: 3. pi. 56. 
f. 5. 1912 
Amanita farinosa Schw. Schr. Nat. Ges. Leipzig i : 79. 1822. 
Amanitopsis farinosa Atk. Stud. Am. Fungi 76. 1900. 
Described from North Carolina, and found in open deciduous 
woods from New York to Alabama. 
Doubtful and European Species 
Amanitopsis adnata (W. G. Sm.) Sacc. Syll. Fung. 5: 24. 
1887. Described from England, and reported from this country 
by IMorgan, Harkness, and others. I have seen no American 
specimens that could be so referred. 
Agaricus baccatus Fries, Epicr. Myc. 12. 1838. Eounded on 
Micheli’s plate 80, figure 4, accompanied by a brief description. 
The warts on the pileus are too evenly distributed, and the volva 
is too small and circumscissile to suggest our Vaginata aggluti- 
nata. If an annulus were present, the figure might suggest white 
forms of V enenarius pantherinus. 
Agaricus daucipes B. & Mont. Syll. Crypt. 96. 1856. De- 
scribed from Sullivant’s collections at Columbus, Ohio, and placed 
by Saccardo in Amanitopsis although the description expressly 
