18 Notes on the Lepidoptera of America. 
A larger species than E. vinulentaria, nod., but resembling 
that species in general color and style of markings. The clear 
pale ochreous color of the wings above is not dusted with a 
faint obscure purplish shade; the subterminal ochreous shade 
band again appears, below the apices of the primaries, over 
the median nervules; the transverse lines are more irregular, 
distinctly geminate on both surfaces; the external border of 
secondaries is clear pale ochreous on both surfaces. E, vino- 
saria (4) varies in the extent of the darker shades on external 
border of primaries. 
Endropia textrimaria, n.s. 
(Plate 15, fig. 6, ¢ .) 
é. Head, thorax, and abdomen, pale ochreous, shaded with red- 
dish on thorax above. A broad, dark, frontal line, before the 
antennal insertion; palpi, dark brownish. Antennae, finely bi- 
pectinate ; the pectinations becoming obsolete at tips. 
Wings, broad ; anterior pair, produced at apices, and more pro- 
minently so on external margin at extremity of second median 
nervule. External margin of secondaries, prominently produced 
and angulated centrally. Primaries, pale ochreous ; all the “ veins ” 
are prominently marked with reddish seales. Basal space, pale 
ochreous, but so thickly irrorate with reddish and brownish scale 
streaks as to leave little of the ground color apparent. The red- 
dish scales are aggregated along costa and form a shade coincident 
with the dark, slightly irregular and diffuse transverse anterior 
line. Median space, pale ochreous, coarsely irrorate with reddish 
and dark scale streaks, narrow, constricted at the sub-median fold 
by the approximation at this point of the median lines. A distinct, 
black, discal dot situate on the discal cross vein. Transverse pos- 
terior line, brownish, distinct, obliquely arcuate to sub-median fold, 
thence running straightly to internal margin, succeeded by a coin- 
cident reddish shade. Outside of the t. p. line, the external border 
is stained with reddish brown and washed with purplish; the dark 
portions are finely irrorate with black scales, leaving the pale ochre- 
