272 W. H. EDWARDS. 



Under side uniform drab; hind margins edged by a whitish line; 

 both wings have a submarginal white stripe, edged by black, broken 

 by the nei*vules on primaries and anterior half of secondaries, after 

 that forming crescents as far as the submedian, ending in an oblifjue 

 straight line on abdominal margin ; edged marginally throughout by 

 fulvous which is brightest on secondaries and nearly wanting on apical 

 half of primaries; between the fulvous band and margin a clear drab 

 space ; on the second submedian interspace a round black spot, and next 

 anal angle, a large black spot covered with pale blue scales, at angle a 

 round black spot and fulvous stripe; both wings have also a second 

 common white stripe nearly straight to middle of disk of secondaries, 

 thence zigzag, edged anteriorly by black scales and a feint line of ful- 

 vous; on the disk of each wing a transverse white stripe. 



Body above concolored, below white; legs white; palpi white, the 

 last joint very long, black-edged in front and tijjped with white; an- 

 tennae annulated white and black; club black, tip fulvous. 



From Dallas, Texas, taken by Mr. Boll. 

 Lyc^na Daunia, n. sp. 

 Male. — Expands 1.2 inch. 



Upper side dull pruinose blue; both wings bordered by a broad 

 fuscous margin, which is dentated next anal angle ; fringes of prima- 

 ries alternate white and fuscous, of secondaries white. 



Under side grey brown, whitish on hind margin of primaries ; on 

 secondaries a white patch from base nearly fills the cell and a whitish 

 band crosses the disk outside the mesial row of spots ; primaries have a 

 series of rather indistinct fuscous marginal lunules ; a mesial row of 

 large rounded black spots, nearly equal, each in a white ring ; a reni- 

 form black spot on arc and a broad spot in cell, both edged with 

 white ; secondaries have a submarginal series of fuscous lunules, the 

 three or four next anal angle surmounting yellowish or pale fuscous 

 lunules ; below the second and third of these are dark fuscous spots ; 

 the spots of the mesial row smaller than on primaries and less clearly 

 edged with white ; two spots transverse in cell, a third above cell and 

 another below, the four making a curved row. 



Body above fuscous covered with blue hairs, beneath grey-white 

 palpi white, black in front; antennae annulated black and white; 

 club black. 



Taken in Colorado by Mr Mead. 



Lyc^na Alce, n. sp. 

 Male. — Expands 1 inch. 



