OF WASHINGTON. 91 



treme base of costa is a short, transverse, oblique, blackish-brown line 

 interrupted in the middle; both discal spots inconspicuous, white, edged 

 with dark-brown scales ; between and slightly above these spots is a 

 blackish-brown longitudinal streak; above and somewhat outside of this 

 streak are two smaller similarly colored streaks, the upper one touching 

 costal edge and the interval between these three streaks light brown. 

 The veins, especially g and lo, are more or less indicated by scattered 

 longitudinal dark-brown scales; around entire apical and tornal edge is 

 a row of well-defined short dark-brown spots. Hind wrings light 

 whitish fuscous ; underside mottled with dark transverse striations and 

 with interrupted black line before the cilia ; cilia white. Abdomen 

 ochreous. Legs light ochreous, tarsal joints annulated with dark 

 brown. Veins 2 and 3 in fore wings separate. 

 Alar expanse, 22-23 nim. 



New Brighton. Pa, (H. D. Merrick) ; Ontario, Canada (A. 

 W. Hanham). 



Type. — No. 11329, U. S. National Museum. 



Nearest, though not very near, to Depressaria heracliana De 

 Geer, with similar wing pattern, but of smaller size and with 

 whiter ground color and hind wings. 



Depressaria juliella, n. sp. 



Second joint of labial palpi ochreous, brush tipped with brick-red 

 and exterior side mottled with red; terminal joint red, shaded with 

 black at base and just before the apex. Face iridescent white; head 

 ochreous mixed with red. Thorax red. Ground color of the fore 

 wings light ochreous, but so heavily overlaid with brick-red and 

 reddish ochreous as to be nearly obscured, especially along the edges 

 of the wing. Near base is a small, dorsal blackish spot. Both discal 

 spots ill-defined, longitudinal, very dark red, nearly black; intervening 

 space whitish ochreous, the terminal and apical veins faintly indi- 

 cated by thin dark-red lines. Cilia red. Hind wings thin, transparent, 

 light fuscous, whitish towards the base, reddish towards the tip, with 

 a darker line around the edge before the reddish cilia. Abdomen 

 ochreous. Legs ochreous mottled with red. Veins 2 and 3 in fore 

 wing separate, veins 3 and 4 in hind wings stalked. 



Alar expanse, 24 mm. 



Pecos, N. Mex. (T. D. A. Cockerell). 



Type. — Xo. 11330, U. S. National Museum. 



This species is very near the European Depressaria nervosa 

 Haworth, of which there is a good European series in the U. 

 S. National Museum, and which Lord Walsingham recorded 

 from southern Oregon. I omitted to take notes on Lord Wal- 

 singham's specimen thus determined, while I studied the types 



