114 ; NORTH AMERICAN FLORA [VoLuME 10 
3. Entoloma luteum Peck, Ann. Rep. N. Y. State Mus. 54: 146. 
1901. 
Pileus thin, conic or subcampanulate, obtuse or subumbonate to cuspidate, 2-4 cm. broad ; 
surface moist, sometimes squamulose at the apex, yellow or smoky-yellow, a little paler after 
the escape of the moisture, sometimes tinged with green; lamellae ascending, moderately 
crowded, broad, whitish, becoming pale-salmon-colored; spores subquadrate, angular, 10- 
12.5 » in diameter; stipe slender, equal, hollow, slightly fibrillose-striate, concolorous, with 
white mycelium at the base, 7.5-10 cm. long, 2-4 mm. thick. 
TYPE LocaLity: Floodwood, Franklin County, New York. 
Hasirat: On mossy ground in woods. 
DISTRIBUTION: New England to Tennessee. 
ILLUSTRATIONS: Ann. Rep. N. Y. State Mus. 54: ol. F, f. 1-8. 
4. Entoloma alutaceum Murrill, sp. nov. 
Pileus convex, ctuspidate, solitary, 3-6 cm. broad; surface smooth, shining, glabrous, 
pale-tan-colored, margin entire to undulate or lobed, concolorous; context thin, concolorous, 
the taste mild; lamellae sinuate, rather broad, subdistant, white to dirty-pink, entire on the 
edges; spores broadly ellipsoid, irregular, decidedly angular, rose-colored, 9-11 yu; stipe equal, 
often curved, glabrous, shining, concolorous or paler, solid, 5-8 cm. long, 4-8 mm. thick. 
‘Type collected in wet moss at Redding, Connecticut, August 26, 1902, F. S. Earle 1248 (herb. 
N. Y. Bot. Gard.). 
DISTRIBUTION: Maine, Connecticut, and New York. 
5. Entoloma parvulum Murrill, sp. nov. 
Pileus small, thin, convex to plane, not umbonate, solitary, 2-2.5 cm. broad; surface white 
with a pale-ashy tint, dry, pruinose to glabrous, conspicuously striate to the disk, margin 
entire, concolorous; lamellae sinuate, several times inserted, rather narrow, not crowded, 
entire on the edges, white to salmon-colored; spores broadly ellipsoid, angular, apiculate, 
10 X 8 uw; stipe short, slender, equal, white, smqoth, glabrous, 2 cm. long, 2 mm. thick. 
Type collected in rather sterile soil in woods near the New York Botanical Garden, September 
13, 1910, W. A. Murrill (herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.). 
DISTRIBUTION: Known only from the type locality. 
6. Entoloma subsericellum Murrill, sp. nov. 
Pileus thin, convex, 2-3 cm. broad; surface dry, appressed-tomentose, white or pallid, 
margin even, projecting; context pallid, the taste mild, farinaceous; lamellae sinuate, crowded, 
narrow, plane, white to pink, quite dark on drying; spores angular, pink, 8-10 X 7 u; stipe cylin- 
dric, fibrillose, pallid, dark in dried specimens, solid, 3-5 em. long, 2-3 mm. thick. 
Type collected on the ground under hemlocks at Redding, Connecticut, July, 1902, F. S. Earl 
431 (herb. N. Y. Bot. Gard.). amy ae 
Hasrrat: Among mosses in woods. 
DIstTRIBUTION: New England and New York. 
7. Entoloma pallidum Murrill, sp. nov. 
Pileus thin, fragile, expanded and depressed, gregarious or subcespitose, 3 cm. broad; 
surface glabrous, pallid, tinged with rosy-isabelline, margin thin, even; context mild, farina- 
ceous; lamellae adnexed, subdistant, ventricose, rather broad, white to pale-pink; spores 
pale-pink, suborbicular, slightly angular, 8 X 7 u; stipe glabrous, white, hollow, fragile, tapering 
downward, 4-5 cm. long, 3-5 mm. thick. 
Type collected in moist woods in West Park, New York, A 
ee r. ugust, 1903, F. S. Earle 1834 (herb. 
Distr1Bution: Known only from the type locality. 
8. Entoloma tortipes Murrill, sp. nov. 
Pileus convex to subexpanded, with a small, conspicuous, conic umbo, rather thin and 
fragile, reaching 3 cm. broad; surface smooth, with a satiny gloss, rosy-isabelline, margin 
