THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 307 



Uncus single, its opposing lower limb nearly as long as the upper and 

 stouter. 

 Harpes nearly flat, the ends bent inward, rounded Cockerelli. 



Eulepiste Cockerelli, n. sp. 



Palpi upturned in front of the head, free, as high as the vertex ; 

 male entennse simple, slightly serrated toward the ends ; veins 8 and 9 of 

 fore wing stalked ; thorax and fore wings dark brown-gray, somewhat 

 grizzled or mottled with darker and with an obscure darker spot at the 

 end of the cell. Hind wings dark brown ; abdomen gray-brown ; expanse 

 16 mm. One male, Mesilla Park, New Mexico, at light, July 8th (T. D. 

 A. Cockerell) ; U. S. Nat. Mus., Type No. 4417. 



. Genus Hvpoclopus, Walsingham. 

 Wals., Trans. Ent. Soc, Lond., 1887, 141. 



Synopsis of Species. 



Uncus single, down curved, broad at base, tip pointed ; harpes broad, 

 narrow at base, squarely truncate ^riseus. 



Uncus double, the two points separate, sharply down curved, the ends 

 bent outward, enlarged and rounded ; harpes long, narrow and 

 uniform . , mortipennellus. 



Hypoclopics griseus, Walsingham. 



Wals., Trans. Ent. Soc, Lond., 1887, 144. 



Arizona (Morrison, from Lord Walsingham, through C. V. Riley) ; 

 San Diego, Texas, May 9 (E. A. Schwarz) ; Oracle, Arizona, June 28 (E. 

 A. Schwarz) 3 Brownsville, Texas, Apr. 27 (C. H. T. Townsend) ; Wash- 

 ington, D. C, July 20 (A. Busck). 



The Texas specimens are pale, the ground colour an ashy white, on 

 which the dark specks and streaks show plainly. The specimen from 

 Oracle, Ariz., is very dark, the black markings predominating. 

 Hypoclopiis mortipennellus, Grote. 



Grote, Can. Ent., IV., 137, 1872 ; XVIIL, 199, 1886. Wals., Trans. 

 Am. Ent. Soc, X., 167, 1882; Trans. Ent. Soc, Lond., 1887, 150; 

 quadripunctellus, Beut. (ined.), Smith's List Lep. Bor. Amer., No. 5057, 

 1891. 



This species, described as Anaphora and placed by Lord Walsing- 

 ham in Acrolophus, may be removed to Hypoclopus, as a majority of 

 the specimens have veins 7 and 8 of fore wings stalked, at least on one 

 side. Of twelve specimens before me, seven have these veins stalked on 



