60 
dentate at veins 3 and 4, waved in submedian fold and bent outward to inner 
margin; subterminal space brown, the outer margin being sharply defined and 
very jagged, outwardly oblique from costa to space between veins 6 and 7, where 
it sends a very prominent dark dash nearly to outer margin, thence incurved with 
a second less prominent projection between veins 3 and 4, then strongly 
incurved to near t. p. line, becoming indistinct towards inner margin; this sub- 
terminal space contains two short black dashes below costa and a broad promi- 
nent suffused dash between veins 5 and 6 extending inwards almost to t. p. 
line; both outward projections are suffused with black and there is a further 
black spot in submedian fold bordered outwardly with whitish; from this white 
spot a black longitudinal bar may or may not extend backward to base of wing; 
terminal space olivaceous gray; a faint irregular dark terminal line bordered 
inwardly partially with white; fringes brown, slightly checkered. Secondaries 
pale to dark brown with traces of discal spot and subterminal band. Beneath, 
light brown with faint discal spots and incomplete median lines. Expanse ¢ 
37 mm., 2 48 mm. 
Hasitat. Kerrville, Tex. (May, June, Oct.) (Lacey) 24’s, 39’s. Types, 
Coll. Barnes; Cotypes, Coll. Lacey. 
The ?’s are very close to basiflava Pack. and we should have hes- 
itated to describe the species as new if it had not been for the very 
distinct appearance of the ¢ sex. Two of the 92’s before us possess 
a black dash in submedian fold; in general the ?’s may be separated 
from allied forms by the inward costal bend of t. a. line, the extremely 
marked dark dash-like suffusion in brown subterminal area and the 
very prominent dash extending to outer margin between veins 6 and 7, 
the t. p. line is also straighter in general course. The even olive-green 
appearance of the ¢’s at once separates them from basiflava, and 
allies them with leucophaca A. & S. They most closely approach 
Hubner’s figure of tephra of any species we have seen but among other 
things possess a distinct white anal spot on primaries and lack, the 
checkered fringes of secondaries; the @ on the other hand is entirely 
different to Hubner’s figure, which shows none of the dark subterm- 
inal shading so marked in our species. The fact that a single @ is 
dated “October” would point to at least a partial double brood. 
Through the kindness of Mr. Lacey the types remain in Coll. Barnes. 
O. VAGANS sp. nov. 
?Parorgyia clintonii Coquillett (nec. G. & R.) Can. Ent. XII, 45 (1880) (larva). 
Olene plagiata Neumoegen & Dyar (nec. Walker) Jour. N. Y. Ent. Soc. II, 58 
(1894) Beutenmuller, Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist. X, 385 (1808); Dyar, 
Bull. 52 U. S. Nat. Mus. 260 (1902); id, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. 24, 887 
(1904) ; Dod. Can. Ent. XXXVIII, 53 (1906); Dyar, Proc. Ent. Soc. 
Wash. XIII, 17 (1011) (partim.). 
