56 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 



plainly marked, runs parallel, between this line and the hinder margin. 

 The terminal space is more or less gray. The outer margin is regularly 

 excavated below the apex. Fringes pale metallic lead color. Hind wings 

 pale fuscous with lighter fringes. Under side of the body, and all the 

 wings pale fuscous. 



Habitat— Me., Penn., W. Va., Ill, Mo. 



Bred from corn by Prof S. A. Forbes. 



I am under obligations to Lord Walsingham for comparing specimens 

 of this and other species with the collections in London. 



Cramhus Juihtellns, n. s. 

 Expanse of wings, 26 m. m. 



Head, thorax and fore wings, chalky white. The palpi are somewhat 

 fuscous on the outside, but white on the rest of their surface. Antennae 

 fuscous. 



The fore wings are crossed by a twice angulated, brown, median line, 

 much darker and heavier on the angles. I'his line starts from a point a 

 little beyond the middle of the costa and runs out beyond the end of the 

 cell where the first acute angle is formed. From this angle the line runs 

 obliquely across the wing to the middle of the hinder margin forming the 

 second angle just below the cell, beyond which the line is nearly obsolete. 

 A double, yellowish line starts from the costa a little beyond the outer 

 fourth, and curving downward runs nearly parallel with the outer margin, 

 to the hinder margin a little within the anal angle. The terminal space is 

 yellowish and this color fuses with the line so that it does not appear 

 double except at the costa, and there is a row of seven black points along 

 the outer margin. The space between the median and subterminal lines 

 has six longitudinal, geminate brown dashes on the veins. The surface 

 of the wing inside of the angles of the median line is covered with silver 

 colored scales, and there are three dark brown dashes, one near the base 

 above the hinder margin, the second outside of this and a little above, and 

 the third extends along towards the second angle of the median line ; and 

 the costa is more or less sordid. Ciha white with a silvery base which is 

 broken by the white opposite the second and third black spots below the 

 apex. 



The hind wings are sordid white, with a narrow terminal border 

 slightly darker. Cilia pure white. Under side of the liind wings lighter 



