72 ; ' Forry-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT ON THE 
short, hollow, silky-fibrillose, white, pale violaceous within; spores 
broadly elliptical, .00024 to .0003 in. long, .0002 to .00024 broad. 
Pileus 8 to 12 lines broad; stem 5 to 8 lines long, 3 to 4 lines thick. 
Thin woods. Catskill mountains. September. 
Related to the preceding species, but smaller, with a hollow stem 
and shorter spores. 
Cortinarius albidifolius, n. sp. 
Pileus thin, convex, subglabrous, whitish, tinged with yellow or pale _ 
ochraceous, the epidermis sometimes cracking and forming squamules, 
flesh whitish; lamelle subdistant, slightly emarginate, adnate, whitish, 
becoming cinnamon; stem equal or slightly thickened at the ‘base, ~~ 
solid, white, variegated below with yellowish floccose squamules, ‘ e 
silky-fibrillose at the top; spores subglose or broadly clipe 00025 
— to .0003 in. long, .0002 to .00025 broad. 
Pileus 1 to 2 in. broad; stem 2 to 3 in. long, 2 to 4 lines thick. 
Woods. Catskill mountains. September. 
Related to C. ochroleucus, but apparently distinct by the sellow, 
seales of the stem and the adnate subdistant lamelle. Both it and — 
the preceding species belong to the tribe Dermocybe. 
' 
Cortinarius spilomeus, /’7. 
Woods. Catskill mountains. September. 
Cortinarius filavifolius, n. sp. 
x 
Pileus convex or nearly plane, fibrillose or squamulose, sometimes — 
longitudinally rimose, varying in color from sordid buff to tawny yel- _ 
low, flesh whitish; lamellze subdistant, adnexed, at first a rich sulphur us . 
yellow, then yellowish cinnamon; stem slightly tapering upward, 
solid, whitish, peronate and slightly annulate by the copious silky, 
whitish veil; spores broadly elliptical, .0003 in. long, .0002 broad. 
Pileus 2 to 3 in. broad; stem 2 to 3 in. long, 5 to 8 lines thick. 
Woods. Catskill mountains. September. 
The pileus is not truly hygrophanous, but the character of the stem — 
indicates that the species belongs in Telamonia near C. bivelus. 1% vik 
differs from (. limonws by its dry pileus, and from C. infucatus by the 
color of the young lamelle. ; 
Cortinarius griseus, 7. sp. AM dant 
Pileus convex, obtuse or gibbous, fibrillose-squamulose with grayish — 
hairs or fibrils, moist, pale gray; lamella subdistant, adnexed, at first — 
pallid, then brownish-ochraceous; stem tapering upward from a 
