6 Cmchinati Society of Natural History 



Cis hicolor, n. sp. 

 Elongate, cylindrical. Colors dark brown and ochre 

 yellow. Head with front margin of ejiistoma rounded and w^ith 

 the transverse suture deep and strong. Front concave. An- 

 tennae 10-jointed. Prothorax dark brown in color, finely, 

 densely punctured. Apical margin simple. Hind angles promi- 

 nent, wider at base than elytra. Elytra with a transverse 

 dark brown basal band for one-third their length. The brown 

 extending along elytral margin nearly to apex. The apical 

 two-thirds of elytra ochre yellow. Each elytra with an elongate 

 spot of brown in front of declivity. Vestiture of dense, con- 

 spicious setae, arranged without order. Elytra narrower than 

 prothorax and fully twice as long as wide. Two males. The 

 first ventral segment has a large flat fovea, whose surface is 

 finely papillose. Length 2 mm. Tybee Island, Ga. H. W. 

 Wenzel, who has one male, and my own collection, one male. 

 The female has not been seen. 



C%s julichi, n. sp. 

 Form elongate, rounded. Color castaneous, with legs 

 and antennae pale testaceus. Eyes moderate and prominent. 

 Epistoma emarginate at middle in male, wath two widely 

 separated blunt angles. The female epistoma is squarely 

 truncate. Third joint of antennae elongate, slender, much 

 longer than fourth. Fifth as long as wide, sixth and seventh 

 wider than long. Punctures single. Vestiture consisting of 

 strong bristles, arranged without order. Prothorax as wide as 

 elytra, with apex simple in both sexes, strongly margined at 

 sides and base. The apex of foretibia is squarely truncate 

 and simple. The fifth ventral segment of male is very short 

 (longer in female) and there are no sex marks on first ventral 

 segment. Length 1.75 mm. New York City. Collected by 

 the late Wm. Julich, to whom it is dedicated. Received from 

 Chas. Leng, who has Cotypes. Six specimens examined. 



Cis blatchleyi, n. sp. 

 Piceous shining. Body rather short and stout, sparsely 

 covered with pale setae, not serially arranged. Punctures 



