The Mycologic Flora of the Miami Valley, O. 105 
d. Stipe equal, solid, 106, 107. 
e. Stipe equal, hollow, 108. 
C. Stipe whitish, glabrous, polished, 109. 
A. Stipe colored, scaly or fibrillose. 
a. Stipe and pileus of the same color. 
102. A. LAnuGinosus, Bull.—Pileus a little fleshy, hemispheric-ex- 
panded, obtuse, floccose-scaly, squarrose with erect muricate scales. 
Stipe solid, slender, scaly-fibrillose, white-pulverulent at the apex. 
Lamelle seceding, ventricose, denticulate, pale-argillaceous. 
Upon the earth in beech woods. Pileus about 1 in. broad, stipe 13- 
2in. high. Umber then yellowish, regular, scarcely odorous. Flesh 
dirty-white. 
103 A. putcamarus, A. & §.—Pileus a little fleshy, convexo-um- 
bonate, pilose-scaly. Stipe disposed to be hollow, curtained-fibrillose 
and scaly, mealy at the apex. Lamelle arcuate-attached, ventricose, - 
pallid then olivaceous. 
In woods, gregarious. Pileus olivaceous-brown, the flesh white 
changing to yellowish. I do not know this plant, and have no figure 
of it; it is given on the authority of Lea’s Catalogue. 
b. Stipe paler than the pileus. 
104. A. Pyrioporous, Pers.—Pileus fleshy, conic-expanded, um- 
bonate, clothed with appressed fibrous scales. Stipe solid, firm, equal, 
curtained fibrillose, growing pale, pruinose at the apex, reddish 
within. Lamellz emarginate, rather distant, white-sordid then some- 
what cinnamon. 
Along roads and paths in woods, early. Pileus about 2 in. across, 
the stipe 2-3 in. high. “ With a pleasant odor of pears or violets.— 
Fries. “ Odor penetrating, like that of rotten pears.”—Berkley. 
Pileus brown then becoming ochraceous-palid; the flesh reddish. 
B. Stipe whitish, slightly tinged with the color of the pileus, 
fibrillose. 
c. Stipe solid, bulbous. 
105. A. rrmosus, Bull. Pileus fleshy, thin, campanulate, silky- 
fibrous, when expanded longitudinally rimose. Stipe solid firm, 
nearly glabrous, somewhat bulbous, white-mealy at the apex. Lam- 
elle free, somewhat ventricose, argillaceous changing to brownish. 
Spores elliptic-ovoid, .0083.0056 mm. 
In woods and waste places. Pileus 1-2 in. broad, stipe 13-23 in. long, 
