Vol. XXVll] ENTOMOLOGICAL NEWS. 153 



lowing parts reddish yellow : Mouth, margin of the eyes very narrowly, 

 a narrow line across the vertex from the eyes and behind the lateral 

 ocelli, the large prepectus except a spot dorso-cephalad, the dorsal mar- 

 gin broadly of the cephalic of the two mesothoracic sclerites, a narrow 

 line across the face about halfway between antennae and cephalic 

 ocellus, lateral margin of scutum at about cephalic third (a triangle), 

 mesal margin of each parapside from near cephalic end, broadening 

 caudad (thus a longer triangle), lateral margin narrowly and caudo- 

 lateral corner broadly of each axilla, lateral and apical margins of scu- 

 tellum narrowly, postscutellum excepting a large area filling the entire 

 meson. 



Fore wings with a smoky area under the marginal vein, ending 

 against the stigmal and not extending quite halfway across the wing; 

 it extends more suffusedly proximad. 



Marginal vein somewhat shorter than the submarginal, the stigmal 

 long, over half the length of the marginal, the postmarginal somewhat 

 shorter than it. 



Hind tibial spurs double, stout, very unequal. 



Head densely scaly, below the antennae with many thimble punctures 

 of moderate size, the genal suture distinct. Antennae inserted a little 

 above the ventral end of the ej-es, g-iointed with two ring-joints and 

 three club-joints, the flagellum thick, the club large-oval, olituse at 

 apex, wider than but not quite as long as the funicle whose joint i is 

 elongate, somewhat over twice longer than wide, 2 somewhat longer 

 than wide, the pedicel a little sliorter than it; club 3 a hemisphere. 

 Ring-joints large. Mandibles rude, tridentate. 



Thorax coarsely scaly, the axillae advanced, large, the propodeum 

 rather short at the meson, with a delicate median carina and no others, 

 longer laterad. Scutellum simple, large. 



Abdomen conic-ovate, produced beneath, as long as the rest of the 

 body, densely, finely scaly like most of the propodeum. 



Described from one feniale in the United States National 

 Museum from North Saugus, Massachusetts, May 24, 1907 

 (J. C. Crawford). 



Type: Catalogue No. 19630, U. S. N. M., the female on 

 a tag, the head, a pair of wings and the hind legs on a slide. 



2. Pseudolynx flavimaculatus new species. 



5 . — Length 4.50 mm. Diflfers from the preceding in being larger, 

 the mouth more broadly yellow and a broad oblique line runs from each 

 corner of it to the end of the eye, between the antenna and the genal 

 suture ; the propleuron is yellow except ventrad, the axillae are mar- 

 gined with yellow all around and the lateral margin of the parapside is 

 rather broadly yellow (very obscurely and narrowly in the other spe- 



