142 ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY 



acute or even short pedicellate at base. In the hind wings the apical part 

 is faintly fumose, and the pterostigma a little darker. 

 Expanse 38 mm. 



Two specimens from Wellington, British Columbia (Theo. 

 Bryant). 



TWO NEW FORMS OF CENE1S Huebner. 

 By HARRISON G. DYAR. 



Mr. Merritt Gary collected a number of specimens of CEnels 

 (Chionobas) in British America in 1903, and among them are 

 two forms that do not agree with any known to me. 



GEneis caryi, n. var. 



Gray brown above, washed with dark ferruginous red submarginally on 

 fore wings, over most of surface of hind wings; two large black ocelli on 

 fore wings above veins 2 and 5, respectively, one on the hind wings near 

 anal angle, the three minutely white pupilled and repeated below. Fore 

 wings below reddish on the disk and inner margin ; hind wings contrast 

 ingly marbled in black and white, the median band strongly white edged. 



One cT, Smith Landing, Athabasca, June 13, 1903. 



7ype. No. 8046, U. S. National Museum. 



Near norna Thunberg, but the red color of the wings is much 

 darker and more rust colored than in this form or in katahdin 

 Newcomb. 



CEneis nahanni, n. sp. 



Blackish above, washed with ferruginous* orown, trie veins darker, the 

 markings of underside showing. A small ocellus or none above vein 5 on 

 fore wings, two to five on hind wings, the one above vein 5 largest, the rest 

 small or absent. Hind wings below black and white, coarsely strigose, 

 somewhat as in uhleri Reakirt and 'vtiruim Edwards, but much more 

 densely, the white of the wing being largely obscured. Median band 

 weakly indicated; ocelli black with white pupils; fore wings shaded with 

 red over the disk. 



One cT, one 9, Nahanni Mts., Mackenzie, 2,500 feet, July 16, 

 1903. 



Type. No. 8047, U. S. National Museum. 



Differs entirely in color from uhleri, and in the coarseness of 

 the markings below from the forms of norna. 



