217 
bears great resemblance to perstrialis Hbn., merely lacking the white 
streak of primaries; we should not be surprised if it proved to be only 
a suffused form of Hiibner’s species, but of course breeding will be 
necessary to settle this question. 
CRAMBINAE 
EOREUMA DENSELLUS Zell. 
In the original description Zeller states that he had had 5 poor 
specimens of this species in his collection from Texas for years un- 
named and proposes densellus for them. In the British Museum are 
5 specimens labelled densellus in Zeller’s hand with further note 
“Texas, Stt. 68” the latter number evidently referring to the year; 
these we think are without doubt the original type specimens; they 
are all rubbed, just as stated by Zeller, but we have matched them 
with a ¢ in Coll. Barnes from Kerrville, Texas. It is a small species, 
quite narrow-winged with the veins marked in white; the venation is 
as given by Ely (Proc. Ent. Soc., Wash. XII, 204). 
EPIPASCHIINAE 
Jocara INCRUSTALIS Hulst. 
The species perseella B. & McD. from Florida has been summarily 
placed in the synonymy of Hulst’s species by our ever-ready friend, 
Dr. Dyar. In the Hulst Collection at New Brunswick there are two 
specimens under this name, the one, a 2, marked type, with no locality 
label, the other, very worn, labelled “Col.” Neither bears much 
resemblance to our ¢ type of perseella and it would need to be a very 
variable species indeed for the two names to be considered as synonyms. 
We see no grounds therefore for accepting Dr. Dyar’s dictum as 
correct. 
TETRALOPHA MILITELLA Zell. 
The types of this species, a ¢ and 2 labelled “Carolina, Zimmer- 
mann”, are in the Berlin Museum and were carefully examined. We 
have matched them exactly with specimens from Oconee, IIl., and 
are very much inclined to agree with Grote (Bull. U. S. Geol. Sur. IV, 
691) that Lanthape platanella Clem. will prove a synonym. Unfor- 
tunately one has only Clemens’ description to go by and this is obscure 
