202 Mr. T. D. A. Cockerell — Descriptions and 



(which is long), labium, and mandibles (except apex and 

 basal tubercle) ; there is a narrow black band on each side of 

 upper half of clypeus ; maxillary palpi very long and slender, 

 6-jointed ; third antennal joint dark red beneath, flagellum 

 otherwise black, except a very faint brownish tint beneath ; 

 cheeks and pleura with long white hair ; thorax above with 

 light fulvous hair ; tegulas rufo-testaceous. Wings hyaline, 

 faintly dusky, first r. n. meeting second t.-c. Abdomen 

 narrow, the hind margins of the segments broadly testaceous ; 

 the surface with thin pruinose pubescence ; apical segment 

 triangular, dark ; venter banded as the dorsum. Legs black 

 basally; anterior femora with a stripe above and the apex 

 broadly ferruginous; hind femora greatly swollen, black; 

 tibiae and tarsi ferruginous, hind tarsi dark, hind tibiae broadly 

 dark in middle, and with a large red apical lamina. The 

 clypeus is hairy and without a keel. 



Kumaon, Ramgarh, India, 6000 ft., Aug. 26, 1918 

 {Fletcher). Two males (no. 46). 



Nearest to H.magrettii, Bingh., but less robust, with black 

 hind femora and dark apex of abdomen. 



Hahropoda fulvipes, Cameron. 



A male from the Khasia Hills, sent by Mr. Sladen as 

 H. moelleri, is not that species, but evidently fulvipes. 

 Cameron's supposed male fulvipes was something else, 

 possibly not congeneric. In the male fulvipes the face below 

 the antennas is entirely rich chrome-yellow and the clypeus 

 is carinated. The scape is yellow in front. The abdomen 

 has the first two segments red. 



Hahropoda hrishna, Bingham. 



A specimen from the Khasia Hills (Sladen) bears a manu- 

 script name by Friese, dedicating the species to Mr. Sladen. 

 I am not aware that Friese has published it. 



Hahropoda hookeri, sp. n. 



$ . — Length about 13 mm. 



Robust, with abundant pale ochreous-tinted pubescence, not 

 mixed with black; clypeus strongly rugose, very prominent, 

 faintly keeled on apical half, with a transverse yellow band, 

 broadest in middle, just before the apex; first r. n. joining- 

 second s.m. before the end. 



This nearly agrees with H. montana, Rad., as described by 

 Bingham, but must certainly be distinct, as the hind tibiae 



