307 



nearer the basal than the extradiscal. Both wings are strigated with ochrecus. 

 Beneath, a little clearer than above, -with no lines; the extradiscal line faintly 

 reproduced toward the costa; no other marking's on the under side of the 

 wings in either sex. 



Length of body, <?', 0.40, 9,0.38; of fore wing, <?,0.47, 9,0.53; expanse 

 of wings, 1.05 inches. 



Augusta, Me. (F. L. Scribncr, Mus. Pcab. Acad. Sc); Brunswick, Me., 

 June 1G, not very common, (Packard, Mus Pcab- Acad. Sc); Essex County, 

 Vt. (Cassino); Andover, Mass. (Sanborn); Natick, Mass. (Stratton); Cam- 

 bridge, Mass., and Mount Washington, N. II., July (Morrison); Pennsylvania 

 (Guenee); "St. Martin's Falls, II. B. T . ; Nova Scotia; Trenton Falls, N. Y." 

 (Walker). 



This species may be recognized by the pale ochreous tint of the wings, 

 by the three lines on the fore wings, with the middle one nearer the basal 

 than the extradiscal, and by the absence of any markings or submarginal 

 row of dots. 



Deilixia pacificaria, ,tp. nov. Plate 10, fig. 28. 



2 £ . — This species is very closely allied to D. erythemaria, and oidy 

 differs from it in its larger size and the more ochreous front, the anterior edge 

 not being whitish, and in the more distinct markings on the wings. It also 

 differs in the fact that the middle line on the fore wings is nearer the extra- 

 discal than the basal. There are traces of two common lines on the under 

 .side of the wings, the extradiscal being heavy and dark on the costa. 



Length of body, S, 0.45; of fore wing, 9, 0.60; expanse of wings, 

 1.12 inches. 



Victoria, Vancouver Island, July (Crotch, Mus. Comp. Zool). 



GUENERIA, gen. nov. Plate 3, tig. 11. 



This genus is nearer Deilinia than any other of the subfamily; the front 

 is, however, narrower, while the palpi are the same. Male antennae simple, 

 compressed ; in the female, simple, round. The wings are of the same shape 

 as in Deilinia, though the apex of the fore wings is a little more acute. There 

 is a slight angle in the outer edge of both wings, much as in Deilinia, and the 

 markings on them are much the same. In venation, Gueneria differs from 

 Deilinia in the presence of a subcostal areole; beyond if, the first subcostal 



