Mushrooms of America Edible and Poisonous ed by Julius A Palmer Jr (1888).pdf

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R-
N.
Mann
X'
Cornell
Un^eksity
ALBERT
R.
MANN
OF
LIBRARY
New
York
State
Colleges
Agriculture
and
Home
Economics
AT
Cornell
University
CORNELL
UNIVERSITY
LIBRARY
3
1924
101
467
094
The
original
of
this
book
is
in
the
Cornell
University
Library.
There
are
no
known
copyright
restrictions
in
text.
the
United
States
on
the
use
of
the
http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924101467094
MUSHROOMS
OF
AMERICA,
EDIBLE
AND
POISONOUS.
EDITED
BY
JULIUS
A.
PALMER.
JR.
PUBLISHED
BY
L.
PRANG
&
CO.,
BOSTON.
(COPYRIGHT,
1888,
BY
L.
PRANG
A
CO.)
GENERAL
DIRECTIONS.
These
science
;
charts
are
prepared
for
popular
use,
rather
than
for
students
of
botanical
all
technical
terms
are,
therefore,
as
far
as
possible,
avoided.
are
indefinite,
The
names
"mushroom"
and
"toadstool"
reason
to
are
both
applied
with
like
equal
any
fleshy
fungus,
and
are
here
used
as
synonymes,
the
corresponding
terms
"plant"
and
"vegetable,"
or
"shrub"
and
"bush,"
in
common
conversation.
No
general
test
can
be
given
by
which
a
poisonous
mushroom
may
be
distinguished
identity,
from
an
edible
mushroom.
either
in
But
each
species
of
fungus
has
certain
marks
of
or
appearance,
;
quality,
condition
of
growth,
at
which
are
its
own,
and
never
radically
varied
none
can
contain
a
venomous
element
one
time,
and
yet
be
harmless
under
other
conditions.
Like
other
food,
animal
unfit
or
vegetable,
table
however,
yet
in
mushrooms
state
may,
by
decay
or
conditions
of
growth,
be
fatality
for
use
;
this
no
would
attend
such
use.
Therefore
the
identification
of
species
eaten,
is
a
safe
guide,
and
is
the
only
means
of
knowing
what
mushrooms
should
be
and
what
varieties
of
fungus
should
be
rejected.
Having
once
learned
to
distinguish
any
species
of
mushrooms
as
esculent,
perfect
security
may
be
felt
in
the
use
of
that
species
wherever
and
whenever
found;
but
any
specimen
varying
from
the
type
in
the
slightest
degree
should
be
rejected
by
an
amateur.
There
are
about
one
thousand
scopic
fungi)
native
to
the
United
varieties
of
mushrooms
(exclusive
of
small
or
micro-
will
States;
many
therefore
be
found
which
are
not
classes,
;
represented
on
either
of
these
plates.
the
Lycoperdacese,
or
PuflT-ball
fungi
;
Those
here
depicted
are
of
three
the
Agaricini, or
Gill-bearing
fiingi
namely,
and
the
Boleti,
which
last
is
one
division
of
the
Polyporei,
or
Pore-bearing
fungi.
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