RAMETES SUAVEOLENS TL. 
Decaying wood. Center. Oct. 
}OLENIA VILLOSA Fr, 
“Decaying wood. Summit. Sept. 
Hypxum SULPHURELLUM PA. 
ee Subiculum thin, effused, definite, sometimes rimose, pale culphur-yellow 5 4 
aculei scattered, conical, subobtuse, sometimes compound, colored like the 
fe “subiculum ; spores oblong, slightly curved, .0002—.00025' long. » ya 
Dead branches of mountain maple, Acer spicatwm. Griffins. Sept. 
The small suborbicular patches are sometimes elongated by confluence. 
iA The color is of a clear whitish sulphur hue. The teeth appear like little conical 
- Prostrate hemlock rma Griffins. Sept. 
Decaying wood of deciduous trees. Oneida. Warne. : 
_ Pileus infundibuliform, eet eillone: lurid-brown, pervious to the base, the 
_ margin generally wavy and lobed; hymenium dark cinereous, rugose when 
moist, the minute crowded irregular folds abundantly anastomosing, nearly 
even when dry; stem short ; spores broadly elliptical or subglobose, .00025'— 
0003’ long. : 
Plant simple or czespitose, 2'-3/ high, pileus 1/—2’ broad. 
oo. Ground under spruce trees. Adirondack Mountains. Aug. 
_ _ In color this species bears some resemblance to Cantharellus cinereus. 
us From Craterellus sinwosus, it is separated by its pervious stem, and from 
. cornucopioides by its more ceespitose habit, paler color and smaller spores. 
_ STEREUM SANGUINOLENTUM A. dS. Jet 
i ___. Prostrate hemlock trunks. Griffins. Sept. <a 
meee: The pileus is sometimes hairy and distinctly zoned with darker bands ; ; the 
____ hymenium is even or radiately-wrinkled. 
- CYPHELLA suLPHUREA Batsch. 
= Living stems of herbs in damp places. Griffins. Sept. Be: 
Some of the specimens were white when collected, but in drying, these 
assumed the yellow color of the others. 
Bex CLAVARIA FUMIGATA PA. 
Stem short, thick, branching from near the base, whitish; branches numer- 
ous, forming a dense mass, smoky-ochraceous, sometimes tinged with lilac; ; 
tips obtuse ; spores .0003’—.0005’ long. 
Ground in woods. Ticonderoga. Aug. 
The tufts are 4/5’ high and remarkable for their smoky or dingy color. 
