96 Peck: New SpEcIES OF FUNGI 
row, close, attenuated toward the stem and attached to a narrow 
collar, whitish becoming pinkish cinnamon; stem equal, rigid, 
stuffed or hollow, adorned below with numerous erect subfloccose 
tawny scales, glabrous above and a short distance below the ample 
persistent annulus which is white above and tawny floccose squamu- 
lose below ; spores elliptic, 8 4 long, 4—5 # broad. 
Pileus 6-12 cm. broad; stem 5-8 cm. long, 8-10 mm. thick. 
About the base of oak trees. Agricultural College, Michigan. 
September. B. O. Longyear. 
Flammula velata 
Pileus fleshy, thin toward the margin, convex, moist, sulphur 
yellow, reddish or orange in the center, the margin persistently in- 
curved, flesh yellow or greenish yellow, taste mild; lamellae ar- 
cuate, adnate or slightly decurrent, 5 mm. wide, pale yellow, be- 
coming rusty brown or snuff-color with age, concealed when 
young by the conspicuous but thin somewhat webby yellowish 
white veil; stem short, slender, flexuous, solid, fibrillose, sulphur 
yellow above, brownish below, somewhat tomentose at the base; 
spores elliptic, 5-8 » long. 
Pileus 2-4 cm. broad; stem 2.5-4.5 cm. long, 2—4 mm. thick. 
Woods along small streams. Base of Moscow Mountains, 
Idaho. July. L. F. Henderson. The strongly developed veil is 
a prominent character of this species. Its moist pileus places it in 
the section Uda. 
Cortinarius punctifolius 
Pileus fleshy, thin on the margin, convex or nearly plane, dry, 
slightly fibrillose and squamulose, yellowish brown, sometimes 
tinged with green, flesh yellow ; lamellae broad, subdistant, deeply 
and abruptly excavated at the inner extremity, adnexed or nearly 
free, yellowish brown tinged with green, becoming cinnamon-color, 
dotted with yellow; stem subequal, often flexuous or irregular, 
glabrous or slightly fibrillose, striate, yellow, varied with bluish 
green; spores broadly elliptic or subovate, 5-7 long, 4-5 4 
broad. 
Pileus 2.5-6 cm. broad ; stem 2.5—5 cm. long, 5~10 mm. thick. 
Woods at the base of Moscow Mountains, Idaho, Summer. 
L. F. Henderson. A peculiar species well marked by the yellow- 
ish dots of the lamellae, a character that has suggested the specific 
name. The species belongs to the section Dermocybe. 
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