374 The Philippine Journal of Science 1922 
femora dark brown, paler basally, the extreme tips pale yellow; 
tibize dark brown, the extreme bases pale yellow; tarsi pale 
_ brownish yellow. Wings light yellow with a very heavy, non- 
 ocellate brown pattern, distributed as follows: Large blotches 
at base of cells R and M; at origin of Rs; along the cord and 
outer end of cell lst M, and at the tips of all the longitudinal 
veins; a series of about ten dark brown spots in cells C and Sc; 
most of the remainder of the wing disk clouded with paler 
brown, but all of the darker brown areas surrounded by narrow, 
clear yellow borders; outer ends of cells Sc,, 2d R,, R., R,, 
M,, 2d M., M,, Cu,, and lst A with conspicuous pale yellow spots; 
veins dark brown, paler in the yellow areas. Venation: Sc, at 
the extreme tip of Sc,, the latter punctiform; each of the dark 
spots in costal cell with a spur or complete supernumerary cross 
vein, there being about a dozen of these beyond h; Rs long, 
feebly angulated at origin; R,-+, a little longer than the basal 
deflection of Cu,; r at tip of R,; inner ends of cells R, and R, in 
alignment; cell Ist M, large, the inner end arcuate; petiole of 
cell M, short, a little longer than R,+-,; m a little shorter than 
the outer deflection of M, ; basal deflection of Cu, slightly sinuous, 
at midlength of cell 1st M,; arcular vein completely obliterated. 
Abdominal tergites with the basal half, or slightly less, of 
each dark brown, the remainder slightly paler, thus producing 
an indistinct bicolorous appearance; sternites conspicuously light 
yellow with the caudal margin of the segments narrowly but 
conspicuously dark brown; intermediate sternites with the ex- 
treme bases likewise darkened; eighth segment and hypopygium 
dark brown. : 
LUZON, Mountain Province, Benguet, Pauai (Haight’s place), 
altitude about 2,400 meters (Baker). Type returned to Profes- 
sor Baker. 
Epiphragma bakeri is a very interesting species, distinguished 
from all allied forms by the series of supernumerary cross veins 
in the costal cell. Similar cross veins occur in the eriopterine 
genera Conosia van der Wulp and Clydonodozus Enderlein, but 
were not known in the Hexatomini. The strongest one of these 
cross veins has persisted in the other known species of Epi- 
phragma. This handsome crane fly is dedicated to Prof. Charles 
Fuller Baker in appreciation of his untiring efforts to make 
known the remarkable insect fauna of the Philippines. 
Eriocera mindanaoénsis sp. nov. 
General coloration reddish, the abdomen orange with the ter- 
minal segments faintly darkened; mesonotal prescutum reddish 
