212 Mr. W. Warren on new 



Pharambara ulterior, sp. n. 



Fore wings very pale ochreous, with pale fulvous 

 markings ; a subcostal fulvous streak ; three small pale 

 fuscous costal spots near base, one just beyond the middle and 

 a larger one shortly before apex ; hind marginal area and 

 fringes fulvous ; an oblique fulvous fascia from inner margin 

 beyond middle to middle of the wing, where it approaches a 

 projection from the marginal fascia, and has a small dark 

 spot on its inner edge ; the pale ground-colour is throughout 

 very finely reticulated with fulvous and the intervals on the 

 costa between the spots are paler. Hind wings the same, 

 without the costal spots, except one dark fuscous one beyond 

 the middle, obliquely below which is a smaller fuscous spot 

 lying on the inner angle of the oblique fascia. Head, thorax, 

 and abdomen pale ochreous, spotted with fulvous. Underside 

 with all the markings very distinct, the last two costal 

 blotches and the oblique fascia on the fore wings being 

 brown-black. 



Expanse of wings 16 millim. 



One male, Khasias. 



In emblicah's, Moore, the large costal blotch is much nearer 

 the middle of the costa as well as the oblique fascia ; and the 

 subapical blotch is darker and runs obliquely outwards into 

 the fringe. 



Genus Siculodes, H.-S. 

 Stculodes argentalis, Wlk., var. tuberosalis, nov. 



Differs from typical argentalis in the shape of the marginal 

 brown blotch, which, instead of being sinuous on the inner 

 edge, is concave and well defined and irregularly oval in 

 shape ; the oval apical blotch, instead of being filled up with 

 black, is shining white, with the upper edge alone black. 

 The brown blotch probably varies locally ; M r. Meyrick 

 (Trans. Ent. Soc. 1894, p. 479) remarks that the Sambawa 

 examples have it narrower than the Bornean, but he does 

 not refer to any difference in the shape and contour. 



This present variety is from the Khasias. 



Family EpiplemidsB. 

 Genus Epiplema, H.-S. 

 Epiplema albipunctata, sp. n. 

 len cinereous ; at one third and two thirds 



