THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 87 



those of Clarus by being a little wider, more irrorate and dusted by dark 

 scales. Same size as Clarus, but easily separated by the abdomen noi 

 being yellow. One specimen. Coll. B. Neumoegen, Esq. .\rizona. 

 The antennae are not so heavily pectinated. There are no perceptible 

 marks on the wings, which arc not exactly of the same shade as those of 

 Clarus, being more grayish. 



Cymatophora (Boarmia) Depromauia, n. s. 



^ . While C. Dataria resembles our Eastern C. Lnrraria in the 

 course of the outer median black line, Dcpronaria has it more oblique 

 and straighter, more like Pampinaria, and this witv^ species is much 

 smaller, but of the same form as Dataria. Pale gray with the discal 

 ringlets small. I-ines narrow, black ; outer line followed by a brown 

 band, diffuse and even inferiorly, opposite cell, waved. S. t. line whitish, 

 scalloped. Inner median line and median shade and outer median line 

 running"close together, a little confused and sub-parallel inferiorly at the 

 middle of the wing, owing to the obli(|uity of the lines and the projection 

 of the inner line. Hind wings like primaries, the mesial lines divergent 

 superiorly, the outer followed by a brown shade. Bod\' gray ; a mark on 

 collar. Beneath the wings are paler, mottled, without lines and the four 

 dark discal dots perceivable. Expanse 26 mil. Arizona. 



In ^ C. Dataria the body is stouter, the mark on collar plainer, the 

 disk t)f thorax somewhat blackish or smoky. The t. p. line is thicker, 

 everywhere distinct, running obliquely outwards and downwards opposite 

 the cell, below which it is sinuous, projected about veins 2 to 3 ; the brown 

 shade is also uneven ; the discal spot is larger on primaries, white, narrow 

 and long; the scalloped s. t. line is more distinctly white on both wings. 

 Beneath pale gray with a thick mark on fore wings and a very slight one 

 on secondaries ; there are traces of darker transverse lines. C. Dataria 

 expands 30 mil. \x\ this latter the fnie median shade is sharply angulated 

 beyond the discal ringlet. I do not think it will be difficult to separate 

 these two Western species from their congeners. 



PAPILIO WALSHII AND ABBOTII, Edw. 



BV A. H. .MUNDT, 1 AIRBURY, ILLS. 



There seems to be a great lack of historical knowledge about the above 

 insects in this State, at least as far as my observations are concerned. In 



