86 ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY 



Type. — No. 11362, U. S. National Museum. 



A very distinct, beautiful species intermediate between the 

 Cuban species A. gcmmata Grote (fastuosa Zeller) and the 

 common A. punctella Cramer, with the deep ocher-yellow 

 ground color of the latter confined to the small dots enclosed 

 in the blue markings. 



Gnorimoschema graphicella, n. sp. 



Labial palpi silvery white; second joint with a few black scales on 

 the exterior side; terminal joint with a black annulation near base and 

 one just before the tip. Antennse strongly serrate towards the tip, 

 white, with narrow brown annulations. Thorax white, sprinkled with 

 brown anteriorly. Fore wings white, with two broad, transverse 

 brown fasciae; one nearly at the base of the wing, the other, which is 

 nearly twice as broad, on the middle of the wing; both are nearly 

 straight edged and perpendicular on the edge of the wing, though the 

 outer one is slightly concave exteriorly; both fasciae contain black 

 raised scales, which in the outer fascia form four small tufts, one pair 

 at the basal edge and one pair near the apical edge. Extreme base 

 of costa black and tip of the wing suffused with light brown and 

 fuscous scales. Cilia white, with a fuscous central line in the apical 

 part, parallel with the edge of the wing. Hind wings whitish fuscous, 

 cilia a shade lighter. Abdomen light gray, anal segment white. Legs 

 whitish, tarsi faintly annulated with brown. 



Alar expanse, 13 mm. 



San Diego, Cal. (W. S. Wright). 



Type. — No. 11321, U. S. National' Museiun. Cotype in the 

 Merrick Museum, New Brighton, Pa. 



A very pretty species, easily recognized by its striking pat- 

 tern. Though quite different in ornamentation it comes prob- 

 ably nearest Gnorimoschema octomaculella Chambers, which it 

 somewhat resembles in coloration and size. 



Untomia albistrigella Chambers. 



Gelechia albistrigella Chambers, Can. Ent., iv., p. 171, 1872; Dyar, 

 List. N. Am. Lep., No. 5779, 1903; Busck, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxv, 

 p. 890, 1903. 



At the time of my revision of the Family Gelechiidge this 

 species was known only from Chambers's description and from 

 the two imperfect types in the Cambridge Museum, and it 

 could not be placed generically with any degree of safety. 

 Thus I was obliged to leave it temporarily among the unrecog- 

 nized species at the end of the genus Gelechia, though I pointed 

 out that the peculiar venation, so far as it could be made out, 



