EASTERN UNITED STATES. 121 



as they do in Eubule, the third does not go quite so near, 

 while the fourth does not extend more than a third of 

 the distance from the margin to the cell, in Eubule both 

 of these going as near to the cell as do the first and 

 second. The remainder are blunt conical, similar to 

 those of the border of Eubule, but a little more blunt. 

 In one small specimen from Indian Biver, Florida, all 

 of these are more abbreviated than in the above descrip- 

 tion. On the hind wings the border is a band scarcely 

 sinuous on the inner edge, narrowing towards the anal 

 angle. In the small specimen the border extends along 

 only the anterior half of the margin. Like Eubule, 

 there are no colored spots on the upper surface. 



Under side a little darker than above, slightly orange- 

 tinted, except along the hind margin of the fore wings. 

 Marked after the pattern of Eubule. There are on the 

 fore wings two purplish-brown spots on the end of the 

 cell, the lower twice as large as the upper, elliptical, with 

 an elliptical rosy patch in the centre; the upper with 

 rosy scales on the cross-vein. In addition, there are 

 the usual three series of spots along the outer margin, 

 the first three parallel with the apical portion of the 

 costa, and situated in the first three subcostal interspaces ; 

 the next three in the next three interspaces, extending 

 obliquely inward, the lower spot not quite half-way from 

 the margin to the cell; the third series contains only 

 two spots, lying nearly parallel with the outer margin : 

 these spots vary from a washing to sprinkling of dark 

 brown scales with a few rosy. 



Hind wings have one spot at the end of the cell with 

 a central silver spot, and four rows of somewhat scattered 

 spots, all of them a little oblique : the first row consists of 

 F 11 



