456 My. 6. Butler’s List of 
brown band, which is elbowed and more or less com- 
pletely divided at the extremity of the median vein and 
between its two branches; four unequal indistinctly 
pupillated black spots in pairs upon the dise, two towards 
the costa and two on the median interspaces, the last 
much the largest; outer border dark brown; pectus 
black ; palpi white ; legs and venter brown ; expanse of 
wings, 1 inch 9 lines. 
@. Rather larger and paler than the male; the 
primaries above all reddish tawny, with the exception of 
the borders, which are brown, and the black subapical 
ocellus, which has a small whitish pupil; secondaries 
with the discal tawny band completed, and not clouded 
with brown, the black spot larger ; wings and body below 
paler than in the male, the outer borders varied with 
white; otherwise as in the male; expanse of wings, 
1 inch 10 lines. 
‘In the woods near the Baths of Chillan, on slopes 
of the Cordilleras, in March, 1880.”—T. LH. 
Three examples, all a good deal worn, but perfectly 
recognisable as belonging to a very distinct new species. 
14. Neomenas servilia. 
3, Neomenas servilia, Wallengren, in Kongl. Vet. 
Akad. Forhandl., p. 78 (1858); Wien. ent. 
Monatschr., iv., p. 36, n. 13 (1860) ; Eug. Resa, 
p. 354, pl. vi., fig. 1 (1861). 
? , Sttbomorpha decorata, Butler, Ent. Month. Mag. x., 
p. 205 (1874) ; Lep. Exot., p. 179; pl. lxii., fig. 3 
(1874). 
“Not scarce near Valparaiso, and also at Cauquenes 
in January.”—T. HE. 
15. Neomenas wallengrenti, n.s. (Pl. XXI., fig. 5). 
3. Above dark fuliginous-brown ; primaries with a 
black subapical spot ; thorax blackish ; primaries below 
tawny, brightest in the cell; the disc crossed by an 
abbreviated pale creamy yellowish band, cut by the 
nervures, widest above the third median branch, en- 
closing a large black subapical ocellus with single white 
pupil, and iris edged with greyish of the same tint as the 
discal band; all the borders of these wings pale brown, 
