steenenn Soumienniads ST 

97 
a eit Spores elliptical, slightly curved or subreniform, 
smooth, 9-12 X 5°5-6 u. Cystidia ventricose, 40-65 x 15-20 p, 
fairly numerous. Smell strong, unpleasant. 
On the ground in woods, &c., Britain. 
One of the larger species of Inocybe characterized by the 
pieus and stem being either pure white, or nearly 
so, and silky when young. As the fungus advances in age rosy- 
red or ochraceous-rosy stains appear on the pileus and stem. 
These tints are also produced when the plant is bruised. 
Inocybe mimica Mass. l.c., p. 492. . 
Pileus campanulate, obtusely umbonate, fibrillose yellow- 
brown, everywhere covered with large, adpressed, slightly darker 
hbrous scales, 6-8 cm. Gills broad, deeply sinuate and attached 
to the stem by a very narrow portion, yellow-brown. Stem 
solid, equal, filbrillose, paler than the pileus, 6-8 cm. long, I -cm. 
thick. Spores subcylindrical with an oblique apiculus, smooth, 
14-16 x 6-8. Cystidia absent. 
On the ground in woods. Britain (Castle Howard, Yorks, 
September, 1892). The pileus exactly mimics that of Lepiota 
Friesi, as figured in Cooke’s Ill, p. 941, hence the specific 
name. 
Inocybe fastigiata (Karst.) Mass., lc, P. 495. 
“The spores are elliptical, sometimes slightly curved, smooth, 
8-11x6-74 Cystidia absent” « In Brit. Fung. Flora RE, 
192, not having an authentic specimen, I copied Saccardo’s 
account of spores and cystidia.” 
Agaricus plumosus Bolt., Mass. Lc., Pp. 500., Bolt. pl. 33 (1788). 
-Massee is “ inclined to think that the fungus Bolton had in 
view Was a species of Col/ybza of the section Vestipedes.” 
Inocybe violaceafusca Cke. and Mass slo. pc, 
This Proves to be a Cortinariys and will thus become C. 
(Dermo.) violaceo-fuscus Cke. and Mass. 
Inocybe tricholoma A. and S, Mass,, oe pas Ol 
"This has been correctly referred to Flammula by Karsten,* 
on the label to Kart. Fung. Fenn., exs, AT one 
ee phacocephala (Bull) Fr. Mass., Lc. Ppe5 Ole? ll 
PL. 306. 
Massee finds “ no justification for the retention of this species 
*Fries placed it in Flammula in his Monographia, Vote, P 350. 






