46 ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY 



black discal point; hind wings whitish, with a dark brown, rather 

 narrow border on outer margin and outer half of costa. Expanse 

 70 mm. 



One male, Rio Janeiro, Brazil (collection of Wm. Schaus). 

 Type. — No. 11 320, U. S. National Museum. 



Azaxia, n. gen. 



Vein 5 of secondaries present; inner margin of primaries with a tuft 

 of scales ; primaries with areole ; vein 5 from below angle of cell ; outer 

 margin crenulate; veins 7 to 9 stalked; vein 10 from the areole, which 

 is long and narrow. 



Type: Azaxia luteilinea = Heterocampa lutcilinea Druce 

 (Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), xiii, p. 249, 1904). 



Eustemides, n. gen. 



Vein 5 of secondaries present ; inner margin of primaries without a 

 tuft of scales; areole absent; veins 7 to 9 stalked. 



Type: Eustemides carama^^ Eiistema carama Druce (Ann. 

 Mag. Nat. Hist. (7), xiii, p. 248, 1904). 



Heterocampa puseyae, n. sp. 



Thorax and abdomen grayish brown, the thorax dark in front, the 

 posterior tuft and ends of patagia lighter; beneath dull ochraceous. 

 Fore wing light brown, broadly shaded with dark brown along the 

 basal half of the costa and in an area beyond and below cell above 

 vein I, limited outwardly by a pale subterminal shade parallel to the 

 outer margin ; lines very faint, the outer traceable, pale, strongly dentate 

 on the veins with pale points, single, excurved over cell, both lines 

 more visible below cell, distinct on vein i, relieved in a narrow brown- 

 black marginal shading; two superposed small black discal dots; a 

 terminal row of slender blackish dashes. Hind wing brown, the disk 

 somewhat varied with ochraceous. Beneath the hind wings entirely 

 pale, the fore wings shaded with brown except at the base. Expanse 

 37 mm. 



One male, Callao, Peru (Mrs. M. J. Pusey, collector). 

 Type. — No. 11331, L'. S. National Museum. 

 Nearly allied to H. mephitis Schaus, but the discal dots both 

 small and of equal size. 



Pheosia rimosa Packard. 



This species has been going under the wrong name of dimid- 

 iata Herr.-Sch. The figure does not fit our species, and no 

 one would have thought of such an identification, but for 

 Herrich-Schaefifer's locality " Am. sept." It is more probable 



