340 Mr. G. C. Champion on various African: 
the base (extending to the outer margin, but not quite. 
reaching the suture), and one, large, transverse, distant 
from the suture, subapical ; the elytra closely, minutely, the 
head and prothorax more sparsely, punctulate, the lateral 
portions of the prothorax dull and rugulose. Head sub- 
triangular, a little wider than the prothorax, foveate in 
the middle between the eyes, the latter rather prominent ; 
antenne slender, joints 1 and 2 elongate and moderately 
thickened, 1 curved, 2 subcylindrical. Prothorax convex, 
barely as long as broad, subcordate, transversely excavate 
before the base. LHlytra rather long, widened posteriorly, 
conjointly rounded at the tip. Legs slender. 
Length 2-2,), mm. 
Hab. Java (ex coll. Bowring). 
Two females, received by the British Museum in 1863. 
A very small, narrow, shining, black insect, with slender 
antennze and legs, and three longitudinally arranged whitish 
spots on each elytron, the latter closely, very finely punctate. 
26. Laius guttatus. 
2. Intybia guttata, Pasc. Journ. Ent. ii. p. 448, t. 18, figs. 6 (1866). 
Hab. Batcuian (A. R. Wallace: Mus. Brit., Mus. Oxon.). 
The type of this species is in the British Museum, and 
there are three others in the Hope Museum at Oxford. 
They must be ? ?, the greatly elongated thickened second 
antennal joint notwithstanding. Pascoe referred the genus 
to the Telephoride. He omitted to note the absence 
of wings in his type, the rather short, posteriorly inflated 
elytra indicating the apterous condition of the insect. The 
elytra have each three white spots—one near the base and 
two placed transversely near the apex. The antenne are 
rather stout, and the long, incrassate second joint shows no 
sign of sinuation, which is very marked in the ¢ of the 
nearly allied L. carinifrons, Pic. 
27. Laius borneensis. 
? Laius borneensis, Pic, L’Echange, xxvi. p. 83 (1910). 
$ © Short, opaque, very finely pubescent; black, the 
anterior half of the head, the antennal joints 1-4 (the raised 
edge of 2 excepted), the tarsi (the fuscous apical joint 
excepted), the anterior femora, and the abdomen in part, 
testaceous, the elytra each with two rather large white 
spots on the disce—one below the base, transverse, the other 
