READER, F. M., Australia- 



RICK, REV. J., Brazil 



Cyathus Poeppigii (No spores found, but feel rather sure of 'it) 

 Cyathus (sp.) (No spores found, and I do not recognize the cups) Lycoper 



" ( Rick says '"' bona 



3"), Arach- 



Geaster (An albino (?) of the pectlnatus section) 

 ROBERT, DOCTEUR, France: 



Femes rubrlporus, Trametes pini, Polyporus lucidus, Polystictus 

 hirmitUB (form), Rhizopogon (sp. unknown to me), Trametes (') Fomes 

 bis Lycoperdon umbrlnum (? old), Calvatia caelata (bright yellow forrr 

 | which very rarely reaches me). 



HOLLAND, MONSIEUR. Corsica: 



Polysaccum pisocarpium (globose form=tuberosum). 

 SCHUPP, REV. A., Brazil: 



Clathrus chrysomycelinus ("Mycelium non semper aureum!") 

 SMITH, J. T. Tasmania: 



Mycenastrum Corium (a nice specimen), Lycoperdon gemmatum (a 

 fine cluster), Lycoperdon (I can not place. 'Root thick, cortex dark 



olive, cup deep, colored, spores apiculate, distinctly rough). 

 THOMSON, GEO. M.. New Zealand: 



Scleroderma (immature), Thelephora (?) fetid when fresh. 

 VAN BAMBEKE, DR. CH., Belgium: 



Fomes applanatus, Polyporus hispidus, Polyporus sulphureus Poly- 

 poms squamosus, Polyporus cuticularis. 



VANDERYST, HYAC, Congo, Africa: 



I A fine lot of specimens from a section little represented in our 



museum. Six collections of Cyathus which we are particularly glad to get. 

 } tropical Cyathi give promise of being the most puzzling proposition 

 that we are working on. Hardly any two of them have the same sized 

 1 spores. 



Cyathus Poeppigii (typical). Spores 28x40. 



Cyathus limbatus. Spores 10x20. This is the first record of the 

 species, excepting in the West Indies, and it agrees very closely. 



5 



