416 Mr. A. G. Butler’s Descriptions of new 
for many years incorporated with the general collection 
and placed near to the species of Schidaxz, has hitherto 
been overlooked. 
120. Hrosia styx, n. 8. 
Dull smoky black; primaries with a pale (sometimes 
dull white) transverse band beyond the middle, bounded 
externally by a zigzag velvet-black band, edged externally 
by a plumbageous line ; basal and external areas sparsely 
sprinkled with grey dots; centre of costal border spotted 
with white ; a discal series of velvet-black spots, the fifth 
from the costa white-bordered externally; a marginal 
series of black spots edged with greyish white; a pale 
marginal line; fringe white, with a black basal 
line; secondaries with a pale angulated central belt 
(sometimes dull white) edged with black and plum- 
bageous grey; external border brown; a black dot above 
the lower tail; upper tail aborted; a white marginal 
line ; fringe white, with a black basal line; antenne and 
vertex of head white, dotted with brown; under surface 
smoky black, sericeous ; wings with dusky disco-cellular 
spots and angulated post-median line, margin and fringe 
nearly as above; secondaries sometimes with dull white 
basal half; expanse of wings 10}—11} lines. 
Yokohama (H. Pryer). 
CABERIDA. 
121. Cabera magna, n. 8. 
Pearly white ; wings crossed from basal third by three 
nearly equidistant scarcely visible chain-like greyish 
bands; primaries with a black dot at the end of the 
cell, and two or three along the apical margin; head 
and extremity of abdomen slightly yellowish (possibly 
stained) ; wings below pearly white, without markings ; 
costa of primaries and body below creamy ; expanse of 
wings, 1 inch 11 lines. 
Tokei (Fenton). 
The largest Cabera known to me. 
PSEUDOSTEGANIA, N. g. 
Allied to Stegania, from which it differs in its rela- 
tively larger primaries, and in the subcostal branches of 
