from China, Japan, and Corea. 89 
The How-Kow specimens, two in number, are rather 
paler than any of the others in the series ; the white band on 
primaries is narrower and is traceable to inner margin. 
Distribution. Central and Western China; Thibet. 
Baptria nigrilinearta, sp. n. 
Primaries greyish brown, traversed by three blackish lines, 
the first not well defined, the second interrupted below the 
middle, the third angulated below costa and lobed at the 
middle, thence wavy to inner margin; the internal edge of 
the third line is broadly bordered with blackish, and the 
external edge bordered with whitish from costa to the lobe, 
and thence with greyish brown to inner margin; the area 
beyond is blackish, traversed by a wavy pale submarginal 
line, which unites with the third line at the lobe. Secondaries 
reddish orange, with three transverse black lines, all of which 
are interrupted towards costa; submarginal line indicated by 
a black spot on costa, and another, linear in shape, on abdo- 
minal margin; outer margin bordered with black. Fringes 
chequered whitish and blackish. Under surface pale reddish 
orange: primaries have the apex and outer margin black, 
separated on the costal area from a black transverse elbowed 
fascia by a short white band; on the basal half there are 
indications of two black transverse lines: secondaries have 
indications of two black lines on basal area, and beyond there 
is a black angulated fascia; the outer margin is black and 
between it and the fascia there is a short black bar from 
abdominal margin. 
EXxxpanse 32 millim. 
-'Two male specimens and one female from Omei-shan, 
Western China: July. 
Allied to B. brephos, Oberth. 
Baptria discothyrata. 
Erateina (?) discothyrata, Pouj, Aun. Soc. Ent. Fr. 1895, p. 315, pl. vil. 
fig. 21. 
Poujade records one male specimen from Moupin. My 
collectors did not meet with this species. 
Hab. Western China. 
Genus INUROIS. 
(Butler, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (5) iv. p. 445 (1879).) 
Inurois tenuis. 
Inurots tenuis, Butl. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (5) iv. p. 445 (1879). 
There was a series from Yokohama in Pryer’s collection. 
Hab. Japan. 
