7G 
Mr. G. T. 1 >^iune-Ijaker’s Revision of the 
l)y whitish lines; postmedian stripe with the costal four .spots nearly 
confluent very slightly oblique, the third and fourth spots dark, 
fifth and sixth also dark and shifted far inwards, seventh spot 
dark and again shifted far in ; an obscure darkish subterminal line 
increasing in width somewhat towards the tornns. Secondaries with 
the basal I'and divided into spots touching each other; postmedian 
stripe, with first costal spot longish and dark ; second, small, same 
colour as the ground; third and fourth shifted right out, dark; fifth 
and sixth shifted right in, slightly darker than the ground ; seventh 
and eighth angled spot dark and shifted far inwards ; anal spots 
blackish and one above it, edged internally with reddish and having 
metallic scales. 
$ . Upperside paler brown than the male. Secondaries with a pale 
subterminal curved line interru^sted at the veins. Undersurface like 
the male, but the white dividing lines broader. 
Hah. Togo; Cameroons; Ogruga (Nigeria); Sierra 
Leone; Patigo (Acholi Country); Uganda Protect¬ 
orate ; N. E. Rhodesia (Neave). 
Type in the Berlin Museum. 
A species very near T. hades, B.-B., but less dark above, 
whilst below the pattern is less prominent and smaller 
altogether. 
Genitalia .—Harpago broad, hollowed, both upper and lower edges 
minutely serrate, the lower developing into a strong tooth in front 
of the extremity, the lower apex forming a chisel-like projection 
with a serrated edge, the upper apex forming a longish strong tooth. 
Cingula well developed with the lower base produced well back¬ 
wards, the girdle narrow, expanding but slightly at the cheeks of 
the tegumen, which is very narrow, slightly hollowed in front, with 
small cheeks. Falces long and strong, well curved at a third from 
their sockets. Furca with long narrow arms well apart. Penis sheath 
a long ellipse for three-quarters its length, suddenly narrowing to 
an oblique extremity. Hairs on cheeks of tegumen and end of 
harpagines long, but not numerous. 
Triclema kamilila, sp. nov. (Plates III, fig. 11; XIII, 
fig. 43.) 
g. Both wings brown. Primaries with a dark dash closing the 
cell, around which is a small patch of a lighter tone, an obscure 
series of internervular marginal dashes, obscurely and palely edged 
internally. Secondaries with a strongly-ai’ched series of subterminal 
internervular whitish-grey dashes from the costa to vein In, followed 
