924 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM. vol. xxvii. 



tupered behind, feet normal, small. Densely" covered with brown- 

 black, Hat g'ranules, forming a double patch dorsally, bisected by a 

 pale dorsal line; ground color whitish, forming a subdorsal band; seg- 

 mental incisures shagreened. Tubercles i and ii separate, i dorsally 

 placed, with secondary hairs; iv and v separate. Later the larva is 

 whitish, with the flat black granules; dorsal, subdorsal, and stigmatal 

 purplish bands, the dorsal band geminately segmentarily bimaculate 

 in blackish. , 



PTEROPHORUS HELIANTHI Walsingham. 



No specimens; one from Mr. Cockle^s collection, Au^'ust 10 (South 

 Fork Creek), may be referable to this species, although it lacks the 

 subapical brown dash shown in Lord Walsingham \s figure. The two 

 discal dots are present, and the brown powdering around the fissure. 



PTEROPHORUS BRUCEI Fernald. 



Two specimens, August 12, September 4 (Shawnigan Lake, Van- 

 couver Island), in poor condition, but seeming to agree with speci- 

 mens from Colorado so named for me by Dr. C. H. Fernald. 



STENOPTILIA COLORADENSIS Fernald. 



One specimen, June 2.5, agrees well with Doctor Fernald's type 

 before me, except that it is smaller. 



Family ORNEODID^E. 



ORNEODES HEXADACTYLA Linnaeus. 



One specimen, July 13 (bred), and one from Mr. Cockle's collection, 

 April 24. The moth emerged in a jar containing leaf miners on snow- 

 berry, but I am not certain that I have correctly observed the larva. 



Family TORTRICID.E. 



OLETHREUTES CAPREANA Hiibner. 



One specimen, July t), and one from Mr. Cockle's collection. Mr. 

 W. D. Kearfott, in kindly going over my Tortricid material from 

 Kaslo, named this form frigidana Packai'd. His determination may 

 be perfectly correct, but, if 9,0^ frigidana can not be a distinct s.pecies 

 from the European capreana. 



OLETHREUTES CAMPESTRANA Zeller. 



Sixty-three specimens, June 7, 10, 11, 13, 16, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24, 

 25, 26, 27, 30, July 2, 3, 4, 8, 10 (Ainsworth), 11 (Ainsworth), 19, 25, 

 August 3, 4. The larva? of this common little species occurred on the 

 thimbleberry {Rvhn^ iiixtkanm). 



