168 First Annual Report 
This species belongs to the gallae-solidaginis group and is close to 
the type of the genus, but easily distinguished by the light ochreous 
head and the lighter general color. 
Gelechia figurella n. s. 
Labial palpi silvery white, dusted with stone-gray exteriorly; 
tuft on second joint well developed, furrowed, longer at base than 
at tip. Face silvery white. Head and thorax ochreous, thickly suf- 
fused with stone-gray and dark ochreous scales, which totally ob- 
secure the ground-color except on the veins, which stand forth as 
clear-cut thin whitish ochreous lines; the entire venation even to the 
fork at base of vein 1» is plainly pictured on the upper surface of 
the wings. Cilia silvery white. Hindwings silvery white. Abdomen 
and legs light ochreous. 
Alar expanse, 21 mm. 
Habitat—Laguna Beach, Southern California. C. F. Baker, coll. 
U.S. Nat. Mus. Type, No. 14336. 
Allied to Gelechia striatella Busck, but a larger and much lighter 
and neater species. 
Scythris sponsella Busck 
Journ. N. York Ent. Soe. XV, p. 139, 1907. 
Paraneura simulella Dietz 
Trans. Am. Ent. Soc. Phil. XXXI, p. 12, 1905. 
Amydria coloradella Dietz 
Trans. Am. Ent. Soc. Phil. XXXI, p. 6, 1905. 
Setomorpha rutella, Zeller 
Kongl. Svensk. Vet. Ak. Handl., p. 93, 1852. 
Setomorpha operosella Zeller 
U.S. Nat. Mus. Bull 52, No. 6549, 1903. 
Acrolophus occidens Busck 
Proc. Wash. Ent. Soc. XI, p. 186, 1909. 
Acrolophus flavicomus n. s. 
Labial palpi curved, ascending, short, hardly reaching vertex; 
loosely tufted on first joint and in less degree on second and third 
joint; light ochreous; terminal joint dark brown above. Head and 
thorax ochreous brown. Forewings light, ochreous brown with two 
dark ill-defined streaks, forming an irregular cross; one from the 
middle of dorsum to costa just before apex; the other from tornus 
to basal fourth of costa; the latter is often more or less broken up 
