86 ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY 



of manzanlta in structure, color, and such markings as can be 

 made out fails absolutely to separate them. The species has 

 not been hitherto recorded off the Island of Vancouver, so the 

 present specimens considerably extend its known range. 



Ccenocalpe carnata Pack. 



Two males from Middle California. Both of these agree 

 more nearly with Packard's description of the species than 

 anything I have seen, and additional material may show that 

 the species generally passing in collections as carnata is dis- 

 tinct from it. Of the latter form I possess a series of 30 

 specimens from Stockton, Utah, and Fort Wingate, New 

 Mexico, and none of them shows so clearly the bright carneous 

 cross-bands, the outer of which contains a series of black ven- 

 ular dots. 



Euphenolia pallimedia, n. sp. 



Expanse, 13-14 mm. Front, vertex, except anterior portion, palpi, 

 thorax, and abdomen reddish-brown ; antennae and anterior part of 

 vertex pale yellow. Wings pale yellow, basal portion of primaries 

 reddish-brown, the outer edge of which is oblique, extending from 

 middle of costa or beyond, where it is more or less diffuse, to quite 

 far in on inner margin. Outer third of wing crossed by a sinuous 

 fascia of reddish-brown, broad on costa and becoming narrower toward 

 inner margin, and bounded internally by the extradiscal line which 

 is of a slightly deeper shade. A small portion of outer area not taken 

 up by this fascia is of a deeper yellow than the center of the wing 

 and the fringe is concolorous with it. Secondaries with outer third 

 occupied by a broad band of reddish-brown, limited internally by the 

 sinuous extradiscal line which can scarcely be separated from it, and 

 externally by the bases of the jellow fringe. Sometimes a broken line 

 of ground color runs through the band near its outer edge. Discal 

 points on both wings small, occasionally absent. Beneath, as above, 

 but the reddish-brown color a little fainter, especially that at the 

 base of the primaries, and the extradiscal lines are more prominent in 

 consequence. 



Habitat. Carr Canyon, Huachuca Mts., Cochise Co., 

 Arizona, in August (Skinner) ; Wilgus, Cochise Co., Arizona 

 (Barnes). 



Types. Male and female in the Academy of Natural Sci- 

 ences, Philadelphia; co-types in the U. S. National Museum 

 (No. 11872), in Rutgers College, and in my own collection. 



A not distant relative of Enphenolia skinncrata Gross., with 

 the same general type of maculation ; but the color of the 

 ornamentation is quite different in paUimcdia and the cross- 



