Bodge—Fungi from the Region of Kewaunee Co., Wis. 811 
fig. 22. Solitary specimens from hemlock logs had whitish gills and 
the stipes were spotted purple, as figured by Cooke, Illust., PI. 8, and 
Lucand, Champ. Fr., PI. 54. Mile Bluff, June, Mauston; Krohn’s 
Lake, August, Algoma. 
Clitocybe amethystina Bolt. The whole plant is deep purplish 
amethyst in the young forms. When old, the caps generally fade to 
gray but the gills retain their color. This species is quite distinct 
from C. laccata. On the ground in open woods, Stewart’s pasture, 
June, Mauston; Perry’s woods, July, Algoma. 
Clitocybe cerussata Fr. On leaves, Otto’s woods, August, Algoma. 
Clitocybe ciavipes (Pers.) Fr. On the ground, Runke’s woods, 
Kodan, October. 
Clitocybe compressipes Pk. In this species the pileus is 2-5 cm. 
broad, yellowish to light brown, plane or depressed, with or without 
zones. The plants usually grow in twos or threes; occasionally clus¬ 
ters of about twenty plants were found in pastures. Lone Rock, June, 
Mauston. 
Clitocybe connexa Pk. The pale sky-blue colors are not visible 
except at close range. . On the ground in low woods under maple and 
beech, August, Algoma. 
Clitocybe cyathiformis Fr. These forms are well illustrated by 
Cooke, Illust., PI. 113; Sow., Eng. Fung. PI. 363; Bull., Herb. Franc., 
PI. 375. Krohn’s Lake, August, Algoma. 
Clitocybe eccexitrica Pk. The stipe is only slightly eccentric in 
our specimens. The base is coarsely strigose. On pieces of decayed 
wood and among leaves, Krohn’s lake, August, Algoma. Peck vid. 
Clitocybe ectypoides Pk. The pileus is plainly marked by black¬ 
ish lines of closely appressed hairs branching dichotomously five or 
six times from the center to the margin. The gills are narrow and 
distant, not close, as described by Peck, Bull. Torrey Club, 25:821, 
1898. Abundant on the ground, Krohn’s Lake, August, Algoma. Peck 
vid. 
Clitocybe gigantea Sow. This species differs from C. maxima in 
' having a much shorter and thicker stipe. The differences are figured 
by Cooke, Illust., Pis. 106, 135. On the ground, Blahnik’s grove, July, 
Aleroma. 
Clitocybe gilva Pers. The specimens dry well, retaining the char¬ 
acteristic yellow colors. The odor is strong, not unpleasant. October, 
Foscora. 
Clitocybe illudens Schw. Very common in dense clusters on 
fallen timber and in clover fields, on roots and stumps in newly tilled 
ground, C. Remington farm, July, Mauston. Rare at Algoma. 
Clitocybe infimdibuliformis Schaeff. On the ground among 
leaves, Awe’s, August, Foscora. 
