THE CANADIAN ENTOiMOLOGlST. 131 



golden to green, and in a female from Hymers, Ont., is distinctly- 

 blue. 



667. A. v-alba Ottol.— Banff, Aug. 19th, 1909. A male on 

 an electric light pole (Sanson). The specimen agrees with Otto- 

 lengui's figure of the type in all except the sign, which is more 

 like that in his figure of stirena, though not nearly as wide. The 

 sign appeared to me to be well within the probable range of varia- 

 tion. 



668. Syngrapha parilis Hbn.— Mt. Athabasca, Mt. Sas- 

 katchewan, and Wilcox Pass, 1907 (Mrs. NichoU). Two of the 

 specimens from Mt. Saskatchewan are in my collection, and are 

 labelled July 27th, 7,500 ft. Holland's PI. XXVIII, fig.40 is this 

 species, and not devergens. 



669. Abrostola urentis Gn. — A female at Dorothy, on July 

 5th, 1905, flying at dusk. 



670. Eustrotia albidula Gn. — Didsbury, June 11th, 1906 

 (Garrett). 



671. Conochares acutus Sm. — (Journ. N. Y. Ent. Soc. XIII, 

 207, Dec. 1905.) Three specimens, two good males and a worn 

 female, at Dorothy, July 5-8, 1905. They were identified by 

 Smith aselcgantula, but agree with Barnes and McDunnough's 

 figure of a specimen of acutus which has been compared with the 

 type. The species was described from Santa Catalina Mts. and 

 Southern Arizona. 



672. Cirrhobolina deducta Morr. — A worn female at treacle 

 on a fence-post within a few hundred yards of my house on Pine 

 Creek, on July 8th, 1909. I made repeated visits to the spot 

 again, by both day 'and night, but never saw another. It is a 

 day-flying species common in parts of the southern states. Mr. 

 Cockle has recorded it from Kaslo, B. C, as well as mexicana 

 Beh.r., of which deducta seems to me only a variation. It is possibly 

 onlv a migrant to Canada. 



'»' 



073. Syneda perplexa Hy. Edw. — A fine female at Dorothy, 

 on July 4th, 1905. It is exactly like perplexa in my collection 

 from Utah and Arizona, and I identified the species by a Glenwood 



