126 
JOHN B. SMITH. 
witli a faint reddish or yellowish suffusion. Beneath, much as the secondaries 
above, reddish powdered toward the outer margins. Expands .96 — 1.08 inches; 
24 — 27 miu. 
Hah . — Colorado (Bruce). 
Three specimens, male and female, from the collection U. S. Nat. 
Museum, others in INIr. Neumoegen’s collection. The species is 
allied to saturata in tibial armature, and somewhat also in habitus, 
but the course of the t. a. line is entirely dilferent, and the fade<l, 
washed-out appearance is peculiar to this species. 
^(cliiiiia ocUreifsiscia n. sp. — Head and thorax overlaid by a thick layer 
of ocherous .scales on a white base, the white appearing at tips of collar, patagise 
and thoracic tuftiugs generally. Primaries white, banded with brownish ocher 
or tan color. A well defined, moderately broad, even band at basal fourth, the 
outer margin at about the place usually occupied by the t. a. line. A broader, 
less definite median fascia, the color less intense, the band broadest at its middle, 
narrower at inner than at costal margin. A moderately broad fascia of even 
width, its course slightly sinuate, occupies w’hat is ordinarily the s. t. space. A 
half band starts from costa at apex and tapers out at about the middle of outer 
margin. A darker line at base of tbe white fringes. Claviform and orbicular 
wanting. Reniform consists of a brown lunule at end of cell, followed by a 
small spot of the same color just beyond. Secondaries white, shading to ocher- 
ous outwardly. Beneath yellowish white, jirimaries with a suhmarginal deeper 
fascia, leaving marginal space somewhat contrasting white. Expands .92 inch.; 
23 mm. 
H((b. — “July, Keru County, Cal.;” “August, Alameda County, 
Cal. In dowers of Proximma callfornicum.” 
Two specimens in the National Museum collection (through C. V. 
Riley), neither of them in good condition, hut together making a 
very perfect whole. The species has the ground color of cuniatilis, 
and the ocherous fascite of chrysellus, hut is utterly unlike either in 
type of maculation. The front is protuberant, bulging, but not 
rough, and the armature of the fore tibiie is comparatively weak 
and consists of a long inner spine, and a series of shorter outer spines, 
much as in cumatilis, but less claw like. 
One specimen has a red ink number 181, which indicates a biolog- 
ical note on the species, in Dr. Riley’s posse.ssion. 
Kcliiiiia uni macula n. sp. — Head, thorax and primaries white, markings 
of the latter of a faint olivaceous clay yellow. Primaries with a broad, curved, 
sub-basal band, the outer margin limiting the t. a. line, which is followed by a 
few .scales of the same color as the hand, indicating its outer margin. Outer 
portion of median space and all of s. t. space of the same faint olivaceous tint, 
through which the white t. p. line is evident, starting in a broad costal patch, 
narrowing to a mere line in its outward curve over the cell and becoming more 
