130 C. H. Kaufman 



nigro-cuspidatus or C. paleaceus, whose spores are much 

 smaller. 



CoRTiNARius BiVELus Fr. (Telamonia). Infrequent. Leal. 

 Tolland. Under spruce and pine. See remarks under C. alu- 

 taceofulvus. 



CoRTiNARius BRUNNEOFULVus Fr. (Telamonia). Infrequent. 

 Leal. In mixed woods. 



CORTINARIUS CAESiocYANEUs Britz. (Bulbopodium). In- 

 frequent. Leal. Alluvial soil, forest. 



CORTINARIUS CALLiSTEUs Fr. (Inoloma). Rare. Leal. 

 Alluvial soil, under spruce, fir and alder. 



This is the second time I have collected this fine species. 

 Fifteen years ago, I obtained a few plants in hemlock and pine 

 woods at Ithaca, N.Y. It is quite distinct and entirely like the 

 European plant. 



CORTINARIUS ciNNAMOMEUS Fr. (Dermocybc). Common. 

 Leal. Tolland. On moss and debris under pine, spruce or fir. 



Cortinarius citrinellus sp. nov. (Bulbopodium). 



Pileus up to 10 cm. broad, fleshy, convex-expanded, very 

 viscid, then somewhat floccose-dotted from the drying gluten, 

 at first "olive-lake" to ''buff -citrine" (Ridg.), finally "clay- 

 color" to "honey-yellow," the margin at first incurved and 

 tomentose; flesh thick, except on margin, at first tinged 

 " primrose-yellow" (Ridg.), then whitish. Gills adnate and 

 rounded behind, then sinuate, moderately broad, 8-10 mm., 

 ventricose, close, becoming slightly subdistant, at first "prim- 

 rose-yellow" (Ridg.), finally "tawny." Stem 5-7 (8) cm. long, 

 apex 1.5-2 cm. thick, at first marginate-bulbous, becoming oval- 

 bulbous, abruptly short-obtusely-pointed below bulb, which is 

 densely fibrillose-tomentose from the "primrose-yellow" veil, 

 elsewhere veil is evanescent and surface of stem concolorous with 

 that of the pileus. Cortina yellowish, odor and taste slight. 

 Spores broadly ellipsoid to globose, 8-9 x 6-8 /jl, rough, brownish 

 under microscope. 



Solitary or scattered. Leal, Colorado. Under pine and 

 spruce. August. 



This differs from its allies in the subglobose spores. It ap- 



