364 HETEROCERA. 
more rounded, patch occupies the end of the cell, and is connected at its inner edge with a smaller 
quadrangular patch crossing the fold; before the apex an obliquely elongate dark spot emits a narrow 
line of scales, running to the dorsum parallel with the termen ; there is a dark line also around the apex 
and termen, including the cilia, but somewhat interrupted towards the tornus by streaks of a pale brown 
colour. Exp. al. 22mm. Hindwings and cilia greyish brown, the latter tipped with pale brownish 
cinereous. -Abdomen and Legs greyish brown; genitalia, uncus slender, bent over, claspers slender, very 
narrowly spoon-shaped. 
Type 3 (66857) Mus, Wlsm. (Godm-Salv. Coll.) BM. 
Hab. Costa Rica: Volcan de Irazu, 6000-7000 ft. (H. Rogers). Unique. 
10. Amydria pogonites, sp.n. (Tab. X. fig. 22.) | 
Antennae brownish cinereous ; Palpi with long beard-like brush beneath the median joint, terminal joint 
short, naked, porrect ; brownish fuscous externally, paler on the inner side. Head rough; pale brownish 
cinereous. Thorax brownish. Forewings short, rounded at the apex; brownish, with a strong 
admixture of dark purplish grey scaling, chiefly arranged in blotches on the outer half; together with 
this are some patches of bright ferruginous, a line of the same running along the fold from the base ; 
four indistinct, dark brownish fuscous, costal spots beyond the middle, with a patch of the same about 
the tornus, the termen also shaded with dark brownish fuscous at the base of the paler cilia; there is 
a pale brownish cinereous patch in the commencement of the dorsal cilia, and a few scales of the 
same between the costal spots serve to indicate them more clearly in certain lights. Hap. al. 11 mm. 
Hindwings with obtusely rounded apex ; dark brown, the cilia scarcely paler. Abdomen greyish 
brown, fading to brownish cinereous posteriorly. Legs hairy; greyish brown, the hind tarsi with pale 
annulations. 
Type $ (66794) Mus. Wlsm, (Godm-Salv. Coll.) BM. . 
Hab. Mexico: guerrero: Amula, 6000 ft., VIII. (H. H. Smith). Unique. 
11. Amydria margoriella Dietz. ° 
=tmarjorieella Dietz, tmargorieella Dietz, +marjoriella Busck. 
Amydria margoriella Dietz Tr. Am. Ent. Soc. 31 10, 11, (tmarjorieella) 91, (tmargorieella) 94, 
96, Pf.3°5 (1905). Amydria marjoriella Busck Pr. US. Nat. Mus. 80 783 (1906) *. 
Hab. AMERICA, N-C. United States’ °—F oripa '— Kansas*: poveLas’: Law- 
yence'—Tuxas'?: SW. (H. K. Morrison, 1884): Bexar’: San Antonio": CAMERON *: 
Brownsville, VI. 1904 (H. 8. Barber)?. Central America—Mexico: Guerrero: Tierra 
Colorada, 2000 ft., X. (H. H. Smith). 
“margoriella”—“ named after my daughter Margorie ” (Dietz, 2. ¢. 11). 
12. Amydria pauculella Wkr. 
Casape pauculella Wkr. Cat. Lp. BM. 29 786 sp. 1 (1864) °. 
Antennae pale ochreous. Palpi with a long brush beneath the median joint; the terminal nearly as long as 
the median, obtuse, slightly dilated, reaching to the level of the crown; whitish ochreous, dark greyish 
fuscous on the outer side of the median. Head and Thorax whitish ochreous; the former slightly 
roughened above. forewings with the costa moderately straight, apex obtusely rounded, termen 
rounded, oblique ; whitish ochreous, blotched with dark greyish fuscous, the number of blotches varying 
in different specimens—one at the base of the costa, and two others, confluent below the fold, placed 
obliquely in line with the one above; at one-fourth is another costal spot, more or less confluent with 
a second below and beyond it, placed obliquely in line with a large triangular dorsal spot before the 
tornus, this forming the lower extremity of a broken series, running obliquely outward across the end 
