Eee 
Differs from Cordylopeza in that 2 and 3 of primaries are not on 
a long stalk but semi-parallel. 
N. FUMALIs sp. nov. (PI. IX, Figs. 3, 4). 
$. Palpi, head and thorax pale ochraceous; tufts on legs smoky brown, 
primaries, pale to deep ochraceous, slightly sprinkled with smoky scales and 
shaded with smoky along costa, crossed by two faint waved ochreous lines; the 
t. a. line is upright, bordered inwardly by a black shade, usually more prominent 
than the line itself; t. p. line strongly excurved, from 2nd costal sinus, then 
subparallel to outer margin, with prominent black border; faint trace of dark 
terminal line; fringes ochreous, smoky outwardly and apically; secondaries 
pale ochreous, slightly smoky, especially along vein 2. Beneath, primaries deep 
ochreous, secondaries pale, costa of both wings shaded with black; traces of 
postmedian smoky line marked on costa with ochreous spot. 
@. Primaries much deeper in color than in ¢, smoky brown, crossed by 
two indistinct black lines, corresponding to the black shade-lines of ¢ ; sec- 
ondaries smoky. Expanse ¢ 15 mm., 2 18 mm. 
Hasitat. San Benito, Texas (March, May, July), Brownsville, Texas 
(Oct. Nov.). 5 6,4 9. Types, Coll. Barnes. 
NEGALASA RUBRALIS sp. nov. (PI. IX, Figs. 1, 2). 
Primaries reddish with slight ochraceous tinge, almost immaculate; two 
very faint pale cross-lines are just discernable, in course much as in the preced- 
ing species and bordered with slight purplish scaling; terminal line and fringes 
purplish. Secondaries pale ochreous with faint purplish terminal shade-line, in 
@ somewhat smoky. Beneath primaries largely rosy, deeper along costa and 
with the indentations suffused with ochreous; secondaries pale ochreous, costal 
border rosy with ochreous postmedian dash preceded by darker shade. Expanse 
é 16mm., 9 18 mm. 
Hasitat. Redington, Ariz. (Chrisman). 6 ¢,1 2. Types, Coll. Barnes. 
PENTHESILEA SACCULALIS Rag. (PI. IX, Figs. 7, 8). 
P. sacculalis Ragonot, Ann. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1891, p. 493. 
This species, described from a single g, presumably from North 
America, has been omitted from our lists; we have however recently 
received several specimens from Southern Pines, N. C.; San Benito, 
Texas; and Babaquivera Mts., Ariz., which prove the species to be 
North American and to have a wide-spread distribution. 
