THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST 



of our Utah specimens are decidedly suffused with pink on 

 primaries." I have seen a large number of the species which they 

 figure, and from the same locality, and should call it a rather pale 

 form of hayesi, as I understand that. I have seen neither type nor 

 description, but a Colorado specimen from the Grote collection is in 

 the British Museum, and is figured by Hampson. It is much more 

 ochreous than any of the seven Utah specimens in the collection, 

 but I have a Gunnison, Colo., male which scarcely differs from 

 Utah specimens in my series. It is not improbable, however, that 

 regina may turn out to be but a pale form af hayesi, to which it is, 

 at any rate, very closely allied. 



609. O. barnesii Sm. — ^A female taken at Banff, on Oct. 

 17th, 1910, on an electric light pole, by Mr. Sanson. The specimen 

 was rather worn, but agreed with the description of this species. 



610. O. levis Grt. — Lethbridge, Alta. One pair, Aug. 24 and 

 26, 1912. Taken by Mr. J. B. Wallis, to whom I am indebted 

 for the male. 



611. O. glennyi Grt. — A male labelled Laggan ("B.C." in 

 error, as usual), 5,000 ft., July 28th, is in the Rutgers College 

 collection, and agrees with Sir George Hampson's figure of the 

 type from Colorado. The specimen very likely came from Mr. 

 Bean. 



612. O. chandler! Grt. — A male from High River, but 

 without date, taken by Mr. Thomas Baird, I have compared with 

 the type of this species, from Colorado, in the British Museum. 

 The type is paler and grayer, and a trifle ochreous, which mine is 

 not. Another male came to light here on Aug. 29th of the 

 present year (1914). A male taken at Lethbridge on Aug. 27th, 

 1912, by Mr. J. B. Wallis, and in his collection, is similar. 



613. O. figurata Harv.? — A female from Lethbridge, July 

 8th, by Mr. J. B. Wallis. I have compared it with the type of 

 figurata, from Nevada, in the British Museum. It differs in being 

 more even in colour, in having the transverse lines more con- 

 stricted in the submedian interspace, where they are joined by a 

 diffuse black blotch instead of a fine line, and in entirely lacking 



