176 The Philippine Journal of Science 1922 
Color in life.—Blackish brown above with two putty-colored 
lines on side of back; small, scattered, greenish spots on back; 
spots on tympanum, loreal region, and top of head putty- 
colored; groin yellow; sides of body slightly yellow; upper part 
of femur yellowish green; throat and belly whitish; femur and 
tibia greenish yellow below. When preserved in alcohol the 
greenish spots appear black. The spots on the tympanum, be- 
low the canthus rostralis, and on the upper lip are strongly’ 
pronounced. 
Measurements of Cornufer cornutus sp. nov. 
Snout to vent 31.6 
Length of head, to behind tympanum 11 
Width of head, at tympanum 12 
Depth of head ate 
Forelimb 20 
Longest finger, to wrist 10.2 
Hind limb 49 
Longest toe, to metatarsal tubercle 15 
Diameter of eye 3.8 
Eye to tip of snout 6.2 
Remarks.—The type was collected from a bush growing in 
the small stream which furnishes drinking water to the town 
of Balbalan. It was found seated on a broad leaf directly above 
the water. Only a single specimen of this new species of 
Cornufer was found in ten days’ collecting at Balbalan. This 
species, more than any other of the numerous species of the 
genus, is worthy of the name “horn-bearer.” The peculiar 
spine above the eye easily differentiates it from other known 
species of Cornufer in the Philippines. 
Kaloula rigida sp. nov. 
Type.—No. 7681, E. H. Taylor collection; collected at Bal- 
balan, Kalinga, Mountain Province, Luzon, April 26, 1920, by E. ° 
H. Taylor. 
Description of type—(Adult female.) Choanz large, par- 
tially concealed by overhanging jaw, separated from one 
another by a distance equal to diameter of choanz; two strong, 
transverse, palatal ridges immediately behind choanz, very 
narrowly separated medially; in front of cesophagus a wide, 
dermal, transverse, palatal ridge, which is preceded by a second 
arched ridge; tongue broadly oval, entire; snout short, truncate; 
rounded on edge; loreal region nearly perpendicular; diameter 
of eye longer than its distance from end of snout; nostrils as 
far forward as tip of snout, which slopes backward and down- 
