868 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. vol. xxvii. 



dark brown, obscure!}' triplicate, including the obsolete lateral line; 

 substigmatal band all red-brown marbled, its edges clearer 3'ellowish 

 white; subventer dark brown dotted on the upper half, reddish below 

 and on \ enter. Feet pale with black tubercles; dorsal tubercles white; 

 seta3 fine, rather short. 



HIMELLA INFIDELIS Dyar. 



Four specimens, July 2, 19, 21 (Bear Lake) and one from Mr. 

 Cockle's collection, July 12, 1902. 



GRAPHIPHORA CURTICA Smith. 



Thirteen specimens, August 16, 17, 18, all very dark in color but 

 apparently conspeciiic with eitrtica^ described from the Sierra Nevada 

 of California. I have others from Pullman, Washington (C. V. Piper). 



GRAPHIPHORA COMMUNIS Dyar. 



Three thousand four hundred and twenty-live specimens, June 13, 



16, 19, 25, July 2, 24, 25, 27, 30, August 4,^ 5, 6, 7, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 



17, 18. This is the species described by Smith as Taeniocampa fur- 

 furata Grote," but it is not Grote's furfurata, which has scaly vesti- 

 ture. I therefore proposed the name communis for this form. Smith's 

 locality "New York" is erroneous, as is also the locality "Illinois." 

 The single female before me, on which he made the latter reference, 

 differs from communis in the straighter, more uniform and oblique 

 transverse anterior line, both this line and the transverse posterior dis- 

 tinctly pale lilled. I think it is at least a different race from communis 

 and I would call it smithii. 



Ti/jM\— Cut. No. 7334, U. S. National Museum. 



The first brood of communis is grayer and smoother than the second 

 which is more yellowish brown and contrasted. 



-Egg. — Spheroidal, the base flattened, upper half more rounded; 

 ribs moderate, diminishing in pairs; reticulations also moderate, crest- 

 ing the ribs and forming cross-striw; apex reticulate, micropyle with 

 circle of pyriform cells. Pale yellow; diameter, 0.7 mm. Laid singly, 

 adherent. 



/Stage I. — Head bilobed, pale luteous, with dusky spots on the 

 tubercles. Body moderate, normal, feet of joint 7 very small, of 

 8 larger, the others normal. Whitish, smooth, green from the food; 

 tubercles moderate, dusk}'; setw long, pale with small bulbous tibs; 

 tubercle iv above the center of the spiracle. 



Stage //.—Head rounded, pale sordid luteous, thickly fleckled with 

 dark over the lobes and in vertex; width, 0.55 mm. Body short, 

 robust, narrower behind, joint 12 enlarged, the feet of 7 smaller than 



«Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., XII, 1889, pp. 477. 



