1024 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts, and Letters. 
nulus, pale, dry. Spokes ellipsoid, fuscous and pellucid 
7—9x11—14/*. 
Note —Stropharia siccipes radiata Pk. N. Y. state Mus. Bull. 67 pp. 
37—38 is a rooting form of Stropharia siccipes. Peck considers the 
roots due to the fact that the plant grew from manure buried in the 
earth. 
Prof. A. P. Morgan, Journ. Myc. April, 1908, removes Agaricus 
(Psilocybe) sullivantius Mont and Agaricus (Psalliota) foederatus, B. 
& M. to the genus Stropharia. Both species were’ described from plants 
collected in Ohio by Sullivant. Until something more is known of such 
doubtful plants it seems best to leave them in the genera in which 
the author placed them. 
Stropharia epimyces (Pk.) Atk. Plant World, June, 1907, has quite a 
history. It is probably the same as Pilosace algeriensis, Quel, as iden¬ 
tified by Lanzi, Fungi mang. e nocini. Tav. LXII f. 3. See note in 
Mycologia May 1913. 
Geneseo, Ills., Feb. 1911. 
