202 Mr. T. D. A. Cockerell — Descriptions and 



(which is long), labrum, and mandibles (except apex and 

 basal tubercle) ; there is a narrow black band on each side of 

 upiJer half of cljpeus ; maxillary palpi very long and slender, 

 6-jointed ; tliird anteunal joint dark red beneath, flagellum 

 otherwise black, except a very faint brownish tint beneath ; 

 cheeks and pleura with long white hair ; thorax above with 

 light fulvous hair ; tegulEB rufo-testaceous. Wings hyaline, 

 faintly dusk}^, first r. n. meeting second t.-c. Abdomen 

 narrow, the hind margins of the segments broadly testaceous ; 

 the surface with thin pruinose pubescence ; a{)ical segment 

 triangular, dark ; venter banded as the dorsum. Legs black 

 basally; anterior femora with a stripe above and the apex 

 broadly ferruginous ; hind femora greatly swollen, black ; 

 tibiie and tarsi ferruginous, hind tarsi dark, hind tibias broadly 

 dark in middle, and with a large red apical lamina. The 

 clypeus is hairy and without a keel. 



Kumaon, Ramgarh, India, 6000 ft., Aug. 2Q, 1918 

 {Fletcher). Two males (no. 46). 



Nearest to H.magrettii, Bingh., but less robust, with black 

 hind femora and dark apex of abdomen. 



Hahropoda fulvipes, Cameron. 



A male from the Kliasia Hills, sent by Mr. Sladen as 

 H, moelleri, is not that species, but evidently fulvipes, 

 Cameron^s supposed male fulvipes was something else, 

 possibly not congeneric. In the \i\i\\e fulvipes the face below 

 the antennee is entirely rich chrome-yellow and the clypeus 

 is carinated. Tlie scape is yellow in front. The abdomen 

 has the first tsvo segments red. 



Hahropoda krishna, Bingham. 



A specimen from the Khasia Hills (Sladen) bears a manu- 

 script name by Friese, dedicating the species to Mr. Sladen. 

 I am not aware that Friese has published it. 



Hahroiioda hooTceri, sp. n. 



$ . — Length about 13 mm. 



Robust, with abundant pale ochreous-tinted pubescence, not 

 mixed with black; clypeus strongly rugose, very prominent, 

 faintly keeled on apical half, with a transverse yellow band, 

 broadest in middle, just before the apex; first r. n. joining- 

 second s.m. before the end. 



This nearly agrees with H. montana, Rad., as described by 

 Bingham, but must certainly be distinct, as the hind tibise 



