12 BULLETIN N. ¥. STATE MUSEUM. 
Collybia cremoracea, 
Pileus thin, submembranous, convex or campanulate, obtuse, dry, 
slightly silky, dingy cream-colored, the margin sometimes wavy ; 
lamelle broad, ventricose, emarginate, with a decurrent tooth, 
whitish ; stem slender, equal, slightly silky, stuffed or hollow, pallid 
or colored like the pileus; spores subglobose or broadly elliptical, 
about .00025 in. long, .0002 in. broad. 
Plant 1.5 to 2 in. high, pileus 6 to 12 lines broad, stem 1 to 2 lines 
thick. 
Thin woods. Gansevoort. August. 
The species belongs to the section La&vVIPEDES. 
Collybia hygrophoroides, 
Plate 2. Figs. 23-26. 
Pileus subconical, then convex or expanded, smooth, hygrophanous, 
reddish or yellowish-red when moist, paler when dry; lamellee broad, 
subdistant, rounded behind or deeply emarginate, eroded on the 
edge, whitish; stem subequal, striate, stuffed or hollow, whitish ; 
spores subelliptical, .0002 to .00025 in. long, .00016 in. broad. 
Plant subczespitose, 2 to 3 inches high, pileus 1 to 1.5 inches broad, 
stem 2 to 3 lines thick. 
Decaying half-buried wood. Knowersville. May. 
The young pileus resembles that of Hygrophorus conicus, both in 
shape and in color. When dry it becomes pallid or subochraceous. 
The species belongs to the section TEPHROPHAN &. 
Mycena luteopallens. 
Pileus submembranous, convex, glabrous, striatulate on the margin 
when moist, bright-yellow, paler when dry; lamelle subdistant, 
slightly arcuate, yellow; stem equal or slightly tapering upward, 
smooth, hollow, yellow, furnished at the base with yellow hairs and 
fibrils. 
Plant scattered or czespitose, about 2 in. high, pileus 3 to 6 lines 
broad, stem about 1 line thick. 
Among fallen leaves in woods. Adirondack mountains. August. 
It resembles Hygrophorus parvulus in color, but it is readily dis- 
tinguished from that species by its subcespitose mode of growth, its 
proportionately longer and more slender stem and the yellow hairs at 
its base. 
