the Dascillide ée. of Japan. 103 
striate, epipleural rim raised; the antennx, first joint small 
and bulbiform, second very small, third three-sided and _pro- 
duced on the anterior mner edge, fourth to tenth apically 
pectinate, pectinations being longer than the joints; the legs 
black and tarsi pale and very slender. 
Hab. Kashiwagi, 19th June, 1881. ‘Two male examples. 
Drupeus vittipennis, sp. n. 
Piceo-brunneus, nitidus; elytris striga humeralis, cum marginibus 
suturali, pedibusque testaceis. 
L, 5-53 mill. 
Pitchy brown, shining, with tawny pubescence; the an- 
tenn, terminal joint apically and the second joint partly, 
and the legs wholly testaceous; the thorax, basal rim, the 
elytral epipleuree, sutural margins, and a humeral vitta, 
which stretches a little obliquely to the middle of the dorsum, 
testaceous; the head clearly punctulate; the thorax simi- 
larly punctured, widest just before the hinder angles, poste- 
rior edge distinctly crenulate and widely sinuous on each 
side, with the intermediate space on the edge before the 
scutellum evenly arched; the elytra, stri# not well-defined, 
somewhat striate-punctate, interstices finely punctulate and 
rugose; the antenne, first joint small and almost moniliform, 
second much smaller, third gradually thickened and flattened 
out from the base to the apex and triangular, 5 to 10 pecti- 
nate, pectinations coequal in length with the joints, terminal 
a little longer than the tenth ; the inner side of the third and 
the pectination of the fourth and fifth, with the apical half of 
the terminal joint, are testaceous. 
Hab. Kashiwagi, 15th June, 1881. Three males. 
Drupeus brevis, sp. n. 
Ovalis, fuseus, subopacus ; thorace marginibus obscure brunneis ; 
tarsis testaceis. 
L, 32 mill. 
Oval, the elytra being feebly wider than the thorax, 
fuscous, and rather opaque ; the head, eyes somewhat promi- 
nent, roughly sculptured, sculpture dense and somewhat 
leather-like; the thorax arched at the sides, lateral rim 
elevated, obscurely brown on the edges, sculpture similar to 
that of the head; the scutellum relatively large and trian- 
gular; the elytra much more coarsely sculptured than the 
