( 542 ) 



cell. The marginal spots of the forewing are sometimes rather distinct. The 

 anterior admarginal spots of the hiudwing, uppcrsido, are centred with orange or 

 are nnicolorous. The two cJc? from the Uaiiji Hill are rather smaller than the 

 specimens from the other places. 



The two ? ? differ from the forms of this sex known to us. The band of the 

 wings, npperside, is similar iu shape to that of ? f. ethalion, but is entirely white ; 

 on the forewing it is posteriorly slightly edged with blue, while it is broadly 

 bordered with that colour proximally and distally ou the bindwing. This form, 

 which bears a rather clo,se likeness to Cli. achaemenes, we name 



Ch. etheocles etheocles ¥-f. daria nov. 



Ti/pc from between Jabalo and Gurgnra ; the second specimen from the 

 Gillet Mts. 



lis. Cbaraxes zoolina zoolina. 



Nyiiijthalis ::uoliiui Westwood, ia Doubl., Westw. & Hew., Geii. Diiirii. Lep. ii. t. 53. f. 1. J (1850). 



Cliaraxes zoolina, Aurivillius, l.r. p. 243. n. 64 (1899 : partim'). 



Charaxes znnliiia ■Mnliiia Rothschild & Jord., I.e. p. 517. d. 80a. t. 9. f. 4. 5. (J , 6. ? (190u). 



14 cJcJ, 2 ? ? from : Bubassa, 22. v. 00; Bio Woraba to Uika, 23. v. OU ; 

 Djabdjabdu, 24. v. 00; At.schabo to Kumbi, 4. vi. 00.; Lukn, Scheikh-Hussein, 

 ~:5. vi. UU ; Scheikh-Hussein, 26. vi. 00. ; Scheko, 26. iv. 01. 



09. Charaxes neauthes neanthes. 



Nymphalis neanthes Hewitson, E.c Butt. i. Nymplmlix t. i. f. 2. 3. ? (1854) (Natal). 

 Chara.res neanthes, Aurivniius, I.e. p. 244. n. 68 (1899) ; Pagenst., I.e. p. loO. n. 7 (1902). 

 Charaxes neanthes neanths, Rothschild & Jord., l.e. p. 523. n. 93a (1900). 



10 SS, 3 ? ? from: Gauda Kore, Argobba, 20. v. 00; Atschabo to Kumbi, 

 4. vi. no ; Gurgura to Gololota, 17. vi. 00; Luku, Scheikh-Hussein, 25. vi. 00; 

 Gillet Mts., 1900—2200 m., 4. vii. 00; Djaffa, 19. vii. 00; Darro, IS. vii. oil. 



[Tn lie eniilinilell.) 



NOTE ON FVLEX FALLIBUS Tasch. 

 By the HON. N. C. ROTHSCHILD, M.A., KL.S. 



THROUGH the kindness of the Director of the Berlin Museum for Natural 

 History we have received two (tj and ?) of the sjiecimens from which 

 Taschenberg drew up the tlescription of I'lile.r pallidus. In this description it 

 is stated that pallidus is so closely related to irritans that the author doubted 

 the two species being specifically distinct. Pulex pallidus proves now to be 

 identical with my Pulex ivitherhtji, described in Ent. Man. Men/. ("2). xiv. 

 p. bO (1903). 



