1920.] NATURAL SCIENCES OF PHILADELPHIA. 81 



Los Banos, Laguna, Island of Luzon, Philippine Islands, (from 

 C. F. Baker), 1 d". 



This specimen agrees fully with Stal's brief description. The 

 species appears to be close to C. urhana (Fabricius), but how close 

 we are unable to state, lacking material of that species for the nec- 

 essary comparison. 



In the male before us the eyes project strongly, though not as 

 slender and more divergent than those of the male of C. granuli- 

 collis Saussure at hand. The conical spine above the ocelli is well 

 developed, the pronotum with surface subgranulate and distinctly 

 quadrilobate in form, the tegmina with proximal spot and ocellate 

 area bittel-sweet orange, the latter with two black dots proximad, 

 bounded proximad by a broad arcuate black line, distad by a hyaline 

 mai'gin with a similar broad arcuate black line bounding it, the 

 extensor field hyaline, colorless except for a large mesal suffusion 

 of blackish brown. 



Length of body 26, width of head 5, length of eye 2.9, length of 

 pronotum 6.1, greatest pronotal width 3.9, length of tegmen 26.8, 

 width of tegmen 6.9, width of tegminal marginal field 1.7, length of 

 abdomen 10, greatest abdominal width 6, length of cephalic femur 9, 

 length of caudal femur 8.7 mm. 



Creobroter episcopalis Stal. 



1877. C[reohoter] episcopalis St&l, Bih. till K. Svenska Vet. Akad. Handl, 

 IV, No. 10, p. 86. [ 9 , Borneo.! 



Labuan Island, British North Borneo, 1 9 . 



This specimen agrees fully with Stal's description, except that 

 it is larger than the type. The sharply conical eyes, lack of spine 

 or denticulation above the ocelli, granulose surface of the pronotum 

 and tegminal markings are particularly noteworthy features. 



Length of body 30, length of pronotum 6, greatest pronotal width 

 3.8, length of tegmen 19.5, width of tegminal marginal field 1.8, 

 length of cephalic femur 7.9, length of caudal femur 6.5 mm. 



6th Group, Pseudocreobotr^. 



Theopropus elegans (Westwood). 



1832. Blepharis elegans Westwood, in Griffith, Anim. Kingd., XV, p. 190, 

 pi. LXXVIII, fig. 3. [ 9 ; Tanesserim [error for Tenasserim] Coast.] 



British North Borneo, (from Fruhstorfer), 1 9 . 

 Sandakan, British North Borneo, (from C. F. Baker), 1 9 . 

 Labuan Island, British North Borneo, 19. 



The three specimens of this remarkable species here recorded 

 all agree closely in size, coloration and color pattern. 



