EASTERN UNITED STATES. 3^9 



yond the cell from the lower end of the anteapical row. 

 The lower three are arranged in the form of a triangle, 

 and when one is obsolete its place is indicated by a mark 

 of deeper brown than the rest of the wing. Hind wings 

 without spots. Fringes fuscous gray, dark brown at the 

 ends of the veins. 



Under side of fore wings about the same color as the 

 upper, but shaded with darker brown at the base, and 

 sprinkled with pale blue scales on the outer part. ' The 

 hind wings colored as above, but with two irregular 

 bands across them, limited by wavy 

 black lines, and sprinkled on the outer ^i«- 88. 



part with pale blue lines. Body above 

 and below dark brown. 

 ^ Fig. 88 represents the Qgg of this spe- 

 cies magnified twenty-eight diameters. 

 The larva feeds on clover, the perfect 

 insect being found in June, or earlier in ^•^^^^^««'«s«'X2a 

 the Southern States. 



New England to Florida, Dakota, Colorado, Call. 

 fornia. 



192. EuDAMus Bathyllus, Sm.— Abb. 



Expanse of wings from 1.4 to 1.5 inches. 



Upper surface dark brown, about the same color as E. 

 Pylades, with a slight grayish tinge. This is almost an 

 exact copy of E, Pylades with the spots enlarged. The 

 spots in the middle of the costa of the fore wings are 

 connected with one in the cell that extends from the sub- 

 costal to the median vein, hour-glass-shaped, sometimes 

 separated in the middle into two triangular spots. These 

 are in line with two of the three spots below, forming a 



