226 ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY 



ard) in Catopyrrha,* and I have a specimen like the one that 

 stands in his collection under that label. It is very unlike Pack 

 ard's figure of his original 9 type Qiferruginosaria^ being even 

 larger than coloraria Fab., while Packard had a small, nearly 

 unicolorous form. It may be called Catopyrrha hulstii, n. sp. 

 It resembles Deilinia behrensaria Hulst (and was once so de 

 termined for me by Dr. Hulst), but the two lines are upright and 

 straight across the wing and there is a separate subterminal row 

 of black dots. 



Selidosema correllatum Hulst. 



Two types, labelled " Macaria correllatum ," are both Scia- 

 graphiagranitata Guen. There is a third type in the National 

 Museum which is quite a different species, resembling Diastictis 

 inquinaria Hulst, but smaller and otherwise different. There 

 are also in another drawer two more types labelled Selidosema 

 correllatum. They are not alike but may represent the species 

 in the National Museum. My notes are not sufficient to settle 

 the point. 



Under the label Sciagraphia granitata Guen., Hulst had 

 eight specimens, three normal granitata, three S. dcnticulata 

 Grote, one specimen labelled as Bates' type of sexpunctata and 

 one Macaria cequifcraria Walk. Bates' sexpunctata, by the 

 way, is, to judge from this type, neither denticulata Grote nor 

 granitata Guen., but calif orniata Pack., or a form of that type. 

 I was unable to compare it properly. 



Nacophora minima Hulst. 



The single 9 type resembles Gabriola dyari Taylor, but the 

 white spot above anal angle is only a faint lighter cloud. It is 

 probably the 9 of dyari. The type is from Colorado (Bruce). 

 Mr. Taylor's generic name will hold. 



Jubarella danbyi Hulst. 



One type only. It is synonymous with Spodolepis substri- 

 aria Hulst. Neither this nor the two tvpes of substriaria pos 

 sess the discal marks, though they are distinct in some of. my 

 specimens. The species flies from the Atlantic to the Pacific in 

 the North and further south along the Rocky Mountains. 



Eugonobapta brunneolineata Hulst 



One type. I think this is only a very badly rubbed specimen 

 of Ania limbaria Haw., that originally had very little purple. 

 Euchlsena galbanaria Hulst. 



This is the same as E. falcata Pack. 



*Bull. 52, U. S. Nat. Mus., p. 317, No. 3758, 1902. 



