95 
squarrose with age, especially at the centre, and the whole pileus 
becomes tinged wath a pink background at maturity, margin 
thin exceeding the gills. Stem 8-9 cm. long, By2 "ern thick, 
incrassated at ‘the base, white, hollow, smooth. Flesh thin, 
white becoming pinkish, everywhere covered with fuscous 
spots, which on the interior of the pileus suggest as if the 
squamules had been rivetted through the depth of the flesh. 
Gills emarginate 2 cm. wide, crowded, margin uneven, whitish, 
becoming pinkish with age. Spores white, globose x ae 
Easily distinguished from its allies by the plant everywhere 
(with the exception of the exterior of the stem), turning pinkish 
with age and by the fuscous spots in the interior of the stem 
and pileus. 
Under Beech trees, Swarraton, Hants. 31st October, and 2nd 
November, 1903, Revd. W. L. W. Eyre. 
Entoloma Farrahi Mass. and Crossl. Naturalist, January, 
1904, p. 1, pl. 1, figs. 1-4. 
Among short grass on “The Terrace overlooking Rievaulx 
Abbey, Helmsley.” (Coll Jo Farrag FES: at ‘the LENG, 
Fungus Foray, 1903). “ Differs from all allies in the smooth 
elliptical spores.” 
Nolanea papillata Bres. t. 82, f. 1, N. mammosa var. Mmimeor. Myr 
Ic, t. 98, f. 4. Batsch f, $7 Cke Iltus.t. 3.77, fx: 
Pileus 2-3 cm. wide, submembranaceous, subcampanulate, con- 
vex, then expanded, papillate, striate, fuscous-bay, somewhat 
cinnamon colour when dry. Stem 4-5cm. long, by about 2mm. 
thick, fistulose, glabrous, shining, obsoletely white-mealy at the 
apex, white tomentose at the base. Flesh concolourous. Gills 
3-5 mm. wide, somewhat crowded, livid white, becoming fuscous 
flesh colour, sinuato-adnate. Smell pleasant, but often very 
faint and sometimes absent. Spores 5-7 angled 8-11 x 6-74. 
Iburndale, Yorkshire, 15th September, 1904. 
Lnocybe lanuginosa (Karst.) Mass, Massee Monograph of the 
genus Inocybe, Annals of Botany, 1904, p. 468 and 400. 
“The spores are irregularly oblong, apiculate, with somewhat 
acute warts, 9-12 x 8u. In Brit. Fungus Flora i aps £83), the 
spores are incorrectly said to be smooth.” 
Lnocybe calos pora Quél. in Bres, Pune Pad, i, | See CO a es 
Sace., Syll. y, P. 773; I. ngidipes Peck., 51 Rep. State Mus., 
P. 289 (1897), Lc, p. 40609. 
‘eus convex or campanulate, then expanded and umbonate, 
tillose with darker Squamules at the disc, yellowish brown or 
