\ VI I l; H, HISTORY SI i;\ i , 



Woods, Millers, [nd., October, !!)i)_'. A. S. P, 

 Bertolel notes that the farinaceous odor and taste atti 

 the species., are no1 noticeable in the plants collected h 

 Tricholoma decorosum Pk. 



Pileus firm, hemispherical then convex or ncarl 

 adorned with numerous brownish subsquarrose to 

 dull ochraceous or tawny; Mesh white. 



Lamellae close, rounded and slighth 

 edge subcrenulate. 



Stem solid, equal or slightly tapering upward, \vh 

 smooth at the top, elsewhere tOmento 



the pileus. 



Spores broadly elliptical, 5 \ ! /<. Pileus 2.5 

 stem .1 to 10 cm. long, I to 8 mm. D trunk 



t rees. 



Woods, Glencoe. October, 1902. Harper and 

 Tricholoma album Schai 



Pileus fleshy, tough, convex, becoming plane or 

 obtuse, very dry, even, glabrous, while, sometimi 

 the disk, rarely wholly yellowish, the margin at fit 

 flesh white, taste acrid or hitter. 



Lamellae emarginate, somewhat crowded, distinct, whil 



Stem solid, elastic, equal or tapering upward-. 

 fibrous, obsoletely pruinose at the apex, white. 



Spores ellipsoid, 5 to C> /*. long. 



Line barrens at the head of Lake Michigan, Cain 

 Ind. August, 1899. Pileus 5 to L0 cm. broad; stem 5 to I 

 long, 8 to 12 mm. thick. Also collected in woods a1 Wii 

 Pileus uneven in outline, margin sometimes irregularly v. 

 large specimens. 

 Tricholoma personatum Fr. 



Pileus compact, becoming soft, thick, convex or plan 

 regular, moist, glabrous, variable in color, generally palli 

 cinereous tinged with violet or lilac, the margin 

 and vihose-pruinose; flesh whitish. 



Lamella^ broad, crowded, rounded behind, tree, viola 

 becoming sordid-whitish or fuscous. 



Stem generally thick, subbulbous, solid, iibrillo- 

 pruinose, whitish or colored like the pileus. 



Spores sordid white, subellipsoid, 7.5 to 9 x I 

 5 to 12.5 cm. broad; stem 2.5 to 7.5 cm. long, 12 to 21 



On the ground in woods. Glencoe. October. I 

 our plant can scarcely be called "subbulbous." 

 downward into a broad truncal.- base. The spores an 

 white, 6 to 7 x 3 to 4 fi. 



Among dead leaves in woods, (dm Lllym 

 These plants are unicolorous, varying from a beautiful heliot 

 to whitish-livid. 



Prof . Peck suggests (Rep. X. Y. Mus. 54: 165), thai this 

 is probably identical with his Entoloma gra 



