Col. C. Swinhoe on Eastern ILterocera. 499 



them Avitli the types in the B. ]\I. : the latter is a very 

 dift'erent insect with strai<rht transverse lines and seems to 

 be very rare ; the type is iu Coll. Standi nger and the co-type 

 in the B. M. My Calcutta examples of vita do not diil'cr iu 

 any uay from the Javan type. 



Stenophyllodes khasiana, nov. 



(J . Palpi much shorter than in S. sikkima, Moore, colour 

 of a nearly uniform brownish fawn with a tiuge of pink ; 

 branches of antennse pale blackish; collar pale and some- 

 what ochreous ; body without markings : fore wings pale 

 towards outer margins and less well clothed; hind wings 

 slightly darker than the fore wings ; both crossed by 

 numerous indistinct waved lines slightly darker than the 

 ground-colour ; a black dot at the end of cell of fore wings. 

 Underside paler, the fore wungs more pink tinged and with- 

 out markings ; the hind wings with two short brown lines 

 running down from the costa near the base, and three 

 indistinct sinuous lines across the disk. 



Expanse of wings 2 inches. 



Khasia Hills. 



A smaller insect than ^S^. sikkima, with the outer margin 

 more deeply crenulate. 



Family Trifidae. 



Euplexia fasciata. 



Xylophasia fasciafa, Leech, Trans. Eut. Soc. 1900, p. 68. 



Khasia Hills; common. 



The type from Western China is in the B. M. and is 

 identical with the Assam examples. 



Euplexia repetita. 



Apamea repetita, Butler, Cist. Ent. iii. p. 133 (1835). 



Khasia Hills ; one example. 

 The type came from Yokohama. 



Radinacra albusiynata. 



Caradrina albosignata, Oberth. Etud. cVEnt. v. p. 72, pi. iv. fig. 1 

 (1880). 



Khasia Hills, 1 ^ . 

 •' The type came from Amurland ; there are several examples 

 in^the B. M. from Central and Westera China; it is closely 



