SMITH: CATALOGUE OF GENUS PARTULA. 463 
with chestnut ; one is chestnut obscurely banded with yellow ; one is 
short, chestnut colored. 
4274. ‘‘Partula varia Brod. var., Huaheine.’’ On the back of 
the card is written: ‘‘ This shell in Acad. Nat. Science is marked 
P. strigata Pse. ex auctore.’” Regarding this note see Proc. Acad. 
Nat. Sc. Phila., 1885, p. 219, where the name is printed szr7gosa 
Pse. (cf. No. 4259). The Academy specimen led Dr. Hartman to 
place P. stvigata among the synonyms of vavza in his first catalogue, 
1881 ; subsequently the mistake was corrected. ‘Twelve specimens, 
ashy, ochraceous or whitish, with a narrow purplish line above the 
suture. 
4275. ‘‘Partula bicolor Garr. MS., Huaheine.’’ Five specimens, 
somewhat inflated, yellowish, with one or two whorls of the spire 
purple brown. Included among the synonyms of P. varza Brod. in all 
Dr. Hartman’s catalogues. This is not P. dzcolor Pse., No. 4162, 
though originally Garrett may have supposed that dzcolor Pse. was the 
same as his shell, which somewhat resembles it. In his MS. catalogue 
probably written about 1881, he gives’’ dzcolor Pse.,-Guam,’’ and 
bicolor Garr. MS. as a variety of varia. 
4276. Partula glutinosa Pfr., Huaheine, Coll. Pse.’’ On the back 
of the card is written: ‘* Examples like these in Coll. Cox from Turner, 
N. Hebrides, not correct; these are from Huaheine.’’ Nine speci- 
mens, larger than any of the other varieties of P. varia, yellow or 
pale, sometimes clouded around the umbilicus, and with the lower 
half of the lip purple tinted. In his catalogue of Partula, 1881, Dr. 
Hartman gives this as a valid species ; subsequently he treats it as 
a variety of varza, in which he agrees with Garrett. See Proc. Acad. 
Nat. Sc. Phila., 1885, pp. 218-219. 
4277. ‘‘Partula perplexa Pse. MS. (type) (typical, H. H. S.), Hua- 
heine, Coll. Pse.’’ Five specimens. Four are yellow with the spire 
white, suture and lower part of the body whorl castaneous, the dark 
color appearing on the inner surface and lip as a purple tint. These 
shells, in color, are exactly like the purple-banded specimens of /. 
cognata Pse. (= 7osea Brod.), No. 4270; in size and form they are 
like No. 4275 and some of the specimens included under varia, No. 
4273. The fifth specimen (perhaps introduced for comparison) is a 
dark example of varza with a yellow peripheral band. P. ferplexa is 
included among the synonyms of vavva in all Dr. Hartman’s catalogues. 
It is not mentioned in the Garrett MS. catalogue. 
