PAMPIllLIDI: CALl'ODES ETIILIUS. ] 751 



black midway between the antennae and the back of the head; a lateral, compresserT 

 transverse tuft of uot very long, bristly li.iirs at the external base of tlie antennae and 

 passing behind them. Palpi gray witli mingled blackish brown and whitish scales, 

 the latter becoming tinged with yellowisli brown on apical half; along the angle 

 formed by the frontal and lateral face of palpi at rest is a row of sliglitly longer, stifl", 

 black hairs, rising more beyond the surface on tlie apical tlian on the basal half; 

 terminal Joint brownish below, blackish brown above. Antennae pretty uniformly 

 brownish fuscous, enlivened with scattered, dull silvery scales along the basal third, 

 freiiuent pale golden scales along the middle third of the inferior surface of the 

 stem, while the apical third is entirely golden, extending upon the basal third of the 

 heavy part of the club and even tinging the upper surface of tlie base of the club ; club, 

 excepting parts mentioned, dull blackish, the crook brown. Tongue black, the apical 

 third castaneous. 



Thorax above olivaceous, the erect, brown scales of prothorax tipped with pale 

 yellowish; beneath yellowish gray. Legs pale buff, the femora lined anteriorly with 

 purplish brown, fringed beneath with silvery scales and yellowish gray hairs; the 

 tibiae paler buff below and behind, and darker approaching close to brown above, the 

 tarsi pretty uniformly dull buff, the terminal joints a little darker. Spurs pale dull 

 buff, spines reddish testaceous; appendages at extremity of legs dark, dull reddish. 



Fore idnys rich dark brown, scarcely tinged with olivaceous, sprinkled with elon- 

 gated, pale honey fulvous scales, brighter and much more abundant on the inner than 

 the outer half, occurring along a rather broad baud upon the costal margin, and a 

 somewhat narrower one along the outer margin ; an ill-defined streak of similar scales, 

 olivaceous above, paler below, occurs along the upper margin of the median vein from 

 the base to a little beyond its first divarication ; just below the same nervure, in the $ 

 at least, but occupying a little shorter space, is a row of downward and outward 

 dii-ected, pretty long, mingled fulvous and brownish hairs; and along the inner 

 border, at a little distance from the base, is a longitudinal, slightly oblique streak 

 of long, dirty golden yellow hairs, reaching next to the outer limit of the spot in the 

 medio-submedian interspace presently to be mentioned. There are five larger vitreous 

 spots upon the wing : the largest crosses the lower median interspace, its inner edge 

 starting from midway between the two divarications of the medi.an; it is subquadrate, 

 slightly broader th.an long, a little oblique and with its lower outer angle a little pro- 

 duced to heighten the effect of its obliquity; another spot about half as large, rudely 

 triangular, is situated in the medio-submedian interspace, its longer side upon the 

 submedian nervure. Its inner extremity scarcely beyond the middle of the nervure; it 

 reaches half way across the interspace; the third in size is in the first median inter- 

 space, is sublunate, opening outward and is situated less than its own width from 

 the very base of the interspace ; a fourth, scarcely smaller and longitudinally quadrate, 

 is in the cell seated on the median nervure, its outer edge on a line with the inner 

 edge of the largest spot ; the fifth and smallest, very small and oval, is also in the 

 cell directly above the inner edge of the fourth; besides these there are three 

 other minute similar spots : one transverse and linear in the centre of the sub- 

 costo-median interspace, the others nearly square, approximate, the lower directly 

 above the first and separated from it by one interspace, but the upper, in the next 

 interspace beyond, a little within that line. Fringe dark, almost blackish brown on 

 the basal portion, and to a greater extent above than below the lower median uervule, 

 the apical portion dirty pale greenish yellow above, brighter, more honey yellow 

 below, nind wings a little darker than the fore wings, but concealed toward the base 

 by abundant, long, longitudinally recumbent, rufo-fulvous hairs, extending in the 

 lower half of the wing more than three-fifths the distance to the outer margin and 

 on the lower half of the upper half of the wing considerably more than two-fifths the 

 distance from base to outer margin ; there are three vitreous spots near the middle of 

 the wing arranged in a nearly straight row at right angles to the inner border, the 

 middle barely lower than the others ; they are of nearly equal size, about as large as 

 third and fourth spots of fore wings, quadrato-sublunulate in shape, the upper one in 



