see 
brown scales which stretch, beneath the median nervure, from the base of the 
wing across the median space centrally and on both sides of the outer median 
line, not extending inferiorly below the black longitudinal stripe. The discal 
space is covered with white scales but the outlines of the spot are indeterminate. 
The outer median line is distinct, black, strongly marked and, while slightly, 
excavate and irregular, is without prominent inflections. Terminally and below 
the prominent longitudinal stripe the wing is covered with pale olivaceous- 
cinereous scales. Terminal line brown, much as in P. obliquata nobis. The 
fringes are much alike in all three species. 
Secondaries pale brownish, no discal spot apparent; a neatly defined, irregu- 
lar, narrow blackish band, which is further removed from the external margin 
than in either of the preceding species and more concise. Under surface a little 
darker than upper surface of secondaries, no perceptible discal spots; a common 
distinct dark band; on the secondaries it is wider than that on the upper surface, 
but covering it and entirely analogous to it. 
Head and thorax cinereous; abdomen concolorous, or nearly so, with 
secondaries; beneath, darker, as are the legs, these latter with darker maculations 
on tibiae and tarsi outwardly. Under thoracic surface griseous. 
Exp. female 2.00 inches. Length of body, 0.95 inch. 
Type Loc. Rhode Island. (Seekonk.) Coll. Mrs. S. W. Bridgham. 
A very distinctly marked species; the dark parallel longitudinal stripes on 
the upper surface of primaries suggested the specific name. This species is 
evidently allied to Parorgyia achatina, but, judging from Abbot's figure, the 
Southern species seems sufficiently distinct.” G. & R. 
Hasitat. Franconia, N. H. (Coll. Doll) ; Rhode Is. (G. & R.); 
Dutchess Co., N. Y. (Coll. Doll); New York (Seifert), (Angus) ; 
Big Indian Valley, Catskills, N. Y. (June 2) (Pearsall) ; Sherborn, 
Mass., (Aug. 15) (Coll. Merrick) ; Boston, Mass., (Hy. Edw. Coll.) ; 
Medford, Mass., (Hy. Edw. Coll.) ; Geneva, N. J., (Aug. 16) (Mey- 
er); N. J. (Beutenmuller) ; White Mills, Pa., (Aug. 2) (Coll. Doll.) ; 
New Brighton, Pa., (Aug. 1-15) (Merrick); Lititz, Pa., (Aug. 16) 
(Coll. Doll); Nebraska (Coll. Hy. Edw.) (?) Tallahassee, Fila., 
(Koebele) (Coll. Doll) (?). 
The last two localities require confirmation. 
O. cINNAMOMEA G. & R. (PI. IV, Figs. 1-4). 
Parorgyia cinnamomea Grote & Robinson, Proc. Ent. Soc. Phil., VI, 6 Pl. I, fig. 
6 (1866) ; Dyar, Psyche VII, 137 (1804) (good sp.). 
Olene cinnamomea Neumoegen & Dyar, Jour. N. Y. Ent. Soc. I], 57 (1894) ; 
Dyar, Proc. Wash. Ent. Soc. XIII, 17 (1911). 
Olene achatina var. cinnamomea Dyar, Bull. 52 U. S. Nat. Mus. 260 (1902). 
“®. Brown. Basally the anterior wings are entirely dull brown. Median 
lines brown, shaded narrowly on either side, with pale scales. Median space 
superiorly covered with pale whitish scales, on which a brown reniform ringlet 
