262 LEPIDOPTERA INDICA. 
marked as in the male. Body bluish-black above, ochreous beneath; collar and 
vertex white spotted; palpi black above; palpi beneath and pectus white; fore 
femora and tibiwe black, fore tarsus white; middle and hind femora black, with the 
tibise and tarsi dull ochreous-white, the tarsi with black bands. Antenne black ; 
eyes reddish-brown. 
Expanse, ¢ 2? to 31, ? 3} to 4 inches. 
Hasrrat.—Assam ; Naga Hills; Arakan, Burma; Malay Peninsula, etc. 
DisrripuTion.—This is a very rare butterfly. Colonel Swinhoe has a male from 
Cherra Punji. A male and female from Shillong, Assam, and a male from the 
Naga Hills is in Mr. P. Crowley’s collection; Mr. L. de Nicéville records it from 
Jorehat, in Assam; Major C. H. E. Adamson took two females in Arakan in 
November. Mr. W. Doherty obtained a tattered male in Toungoo (P. Z. 8. 1891, 
283). It also occurs in the Malay Peninsula (Distant Rhop. Malay. p. 104), Batavia 
(Snellen), Java (Horsfield), Billiton (Godman and Salvin), Labuan (British Museum), 
and Borneo ( Distant). 
Of our illustrations of H. Schreiberi on Plate 188, fig. 1 is from the Naga Hill 
male, and fig. la from a Shillong female. 
EULEPIS WARDII (Plate 188, figs. 2, 2a, b, ¢ ; et larva and pupa). 
Imaco.—Male. Upperside similar to E. Schreiberi. Forewing differing in the 
medial white band extending up to the lower subcostal veinlet, the upper end having 
two additional portions, placed in a linear series with the others, the band itself 
being also comparatively narrower and of a more uniform width, and the subapical 
spots being absent. Hindwing similar to Schreiberi. Underside differs in the 
medial white band of the forewing being of uniform width and having the two 
additional portions at the upper end, the carmine patch absent, and the lunular 
marks disposed in a less curved series, otherwise similarly marked as in Schreiberi. 
Expanse, ¢ 32 to 3% inches. 
Apourr CaTmrPiLLak.—Slug-shaped ; dark green and pale dotted above, pale 
beneath, and with a yellowish saddle-like dorsal band on anterior part of seventh 
segment; head with four incurved, red, tuberculated processes ; anal segment with 
two, short, conical pointed processes. 
CurysaLis.—Short, thick, cylindrically-ovate; green; smooth; dorsum much 
arched; head truncated, pointed in front. 
Hasirat.—s. India. 
Distrisution.—The late Mr. §. N. Ward reared a male from larva found at 
Calicut, in August, 1853. Dr. Jerdon obtained a specimen at Anjirucady, near 
Tellicherry. Mr. de Nicéville (Butt. India, 275) records a single male taken in the 
Wynaad by Mr, Rhodes Morgan; and that Mr. Harold Ferguson obtained a broken 
