314 DECADES OF FUNGI. 
Pileus scarce 4 an inch long, flabelliform, convex, ochra- 
ceous-brown, clothed with minute adpressed scales, Stêm 
none. Gills rather broad, rounded behind, bright buff. d 
Spores subglobose, of a pale ochre-yellow. cm 
_ Ido not know any species with which this can be com- 
pared. Agaricus croceo-lamellatus, Let., is, I believe, the 
same with Paxillus Panuoides. The only resemblance, how- | 
ever, is in the colour of the gills. It is perhaps most like Ag. 
mollis, but besides the difference in the colour of the gills, - 
the spores are smaller and of another form. It is not, I 
believe, gc ume in any stage of growth. 
114. A. (Pratella) fabaceus, n. Sp.; pileo tenui umbonato 
albo demum plano; stipite glabro fibrilloso basi bulbosa 
excepta quali albo, velo amplo extus floccoso; la 
confertis tenuissimis liberis brunneis: es 
> -On the ground amongst dead leaves in open woods. W 
sville, Ohio. Sept. 10, 1844. T. G. Lea, Esq. — 
4-5 inches across, thin, almost submembranat 
mate ; conical when young, becoming nearly plane 
expands, white, viscid when moist; epidermis sm 
tough, feeling like fine kid leather, turning yor, * 
bruised. — 
Stem 3-4 inches high n of an Hinh thick, white, SI 
with the exception of a few fibrille, equal, except 
base. Veil large at first, covering the gills and cor 
the sorgin. with the Hos white, externally foc 
+ 
