219 
excentric, white or slightly brown-tinted below, stout, dress 
solid, dull, not polished. Spores pale rusty, spherical to 
slightly oval, verrucose; 7 p, 8'Dx 7 p. Taste mild. Emerg- 
across; spores 8 5 to 10:4 x 7 to 78 p, n. appar- 
ently white). (Miss Clarke, Watercolour 63.) 
Pileus ad 7:5 cm. latus, depressus ad infundibuliformis, albus 
vel subfusco- albidus, non nitidus. Caro alba. Lamellae 
adnatae, confertae, subluteo-albidae, deinde subochraceae. 
Stipes 3 to 5 cm. altus, 1:25 ad 1'8 cm. crassus, interdum 
subexcentricus, crassus, solidus, non epic albus. de 
non piperatus. Sporae subochrac , spheric ae ad su 
ellipticae, pra a T p, 9bx nE * 
At one time we thought our species might be Russula 
periglypta, B. and Br., of Ceylon. Through the kindness of 
Mr. T. Petch, of Peradeniya a Ceylon, we have 
received coloured drawings an specimens of the Ceylon 
ERNU which show that the ark are clearly distinct 
indicated under ict dec paraditopa (No. 100), it is 
ped ‘that a coloured figure of this species, the plate of which 
repared for several years, will be published in the 
M potus Gazette bs N.S. Wales in 1920. 
COLLYBIA. 
SECT. I.—STRIAEPEDES 
119. Coliybia radicata, Relh. (Syn. C. eradicata, Kalch.; 
ba, Cke. and Mass.).—The typical form is 
that it may be possibly only an accidental cities r^ the 
atter, and so sink C. eradicata as a synonym. C. olivaceo- 
alba is recorded in Cooke (No. 82), and for Kogarah, New 
South Wales, by R. T. Baker (Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S. Wales, 
xxiv, (1899), p. "a ior Victoria and South Australia. From 
