224 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 



" Thomas refers. This remark is offered simply to aid any future student 

 " who may search for the origin of the name. " 



This statement by Mr. Scudder indicates a forgetfulness on his part 

 of what he has written, as the reader will see by referring to " List of 

 Orthoptera collected by Dr. A. S. Packard in Colorado and the neighbor- 

 ing Territories, during the summer of 1S75," pg. 267, where he will find 

 the following statement : " Stenopelmatus oculatus and Cratypedes lineatus 

 " are described from specimens dried after immersion in alcohol." This 

 remark is offered simply to aid any future student who may search for the 

 origin of the name. 



DESCRIPTION OF A NEW SPECIES OF PAMPHILA 



FROM FLORIDA. 



by w. h. edwards, coalburgh, w. va. 



Pamphila. Byssus. 



Male. — Expands 1.6 inch. 



Upper side dark glossy brown • the basal half of costa of primaries 

 ferruginous, as well as a little of cell below adjoining; at the end of cell 

 an irregular yellow-fulvous bar within ; across disk a bent yellow-fulvous 

 band, starting on costal margin about three-fifths the distance from base 

 to apex, bending round cell and continued to middle of submedian ner- 

 vure, narrow at top, but below cell widening rapidly ; the basal half of 

 inner margin washed fulvous. Secondaries have a fulvous patch on 

 middle of disk, usually sub-ovate, but sometimes connected with a fulvous 

 patch in cell which runs toward base ; the hairs of basal area next inner 

 margin fulvous ; fringes of primaries dark gray-brown, of secondaries 

 lighter. 



Under side wholly ferruginous (individuals varying a little in shade), 

 except that the posterior half of primaries from hind margin to base is 

 blackish ; the spots of upper side repeated indistinctly ; on- secondaries 

 in most examples the surface is immaculate, in others there is a faint paler 

 color indicating the patch of upper side ; the nervures and branches on 

 secondaries are a shade mure yellow than the ground color. 



Body above covered with fulvous hairs on black ; beneath, the thorax 



