370 On Cicadidee from the Malay Archipelago. 
subbasal transverse streak and spot and a spot on each 
lateral margin black. Mesonotum very dark castaneous; 
lateral and posterior margins and basal cruciform elevation 
pale greenish ochraceous; disk with two large obconical 
central dark ochraceous fascia. Abdomen very dark casta- 
neous, posterior segmental margins pale greenish ochraceous, 
two small central white spots at base, and a large white spot 
on each lateral margin of the second segment. Body beneath 
pale ochraceous and greyishly pilose; legs pale castaneous, 
bases of the tibie greenish ochraceous ; face centrally pale 
greenish ochraceous, the transverse ridges black; opercula 
greyish white, with their disks ochraceous; two large black 
spots on apical segment and two smaller ones on anal ap- 
pendage. 
Tegmina and wings pale hyaline, the venation greenish on 
basal and pitchy on apical areas. 
Opercula very long, about reaching base of apical segment, 
subtriangular, their apices obtusely rounded. Rostrum 
reaching the posterior coxe. 
Long., excl. tegm., ¢ 28 millim.; exp. tegm. 90 millim. 
Hab, Lombok, Sambalun, 4000 feet (4. Fruhstorfer). 
This species is allied to the one figured by Stoll (fig. 132), 
of which there is a female Javan specimen in the British 
Museum, and from which the elongated opercula and the 
size and markings render it very distinct. 
Fluechys incarnata, Germ. 
Huechys incarnata, Dist. Mon, Orient. Cicad. p. 112, tab. iii. figs. 4a, b. 
Var. b differs from var. a (ibid. p. 113) as follows :—The 
front is red as in typical specimens; the centre of the abdomen 
both above and beneath (excluding the segmental margins) 
black. Tegmina greyish white, with the venation, basal cell, 
&c. black as in ordinary examples, but with the whole apical 
half infuscated. 
S. Celebes, Bua- Kraeng, 5000 feet (HZ. Fruhstorfer). 
Genus LEMBEJA. 
Inmy ‘ Monogiaph of Oriental Cicadide,’ under the specific 
name Lembeja maculosa, Dist., I included the type, a female 
specimen in the Dresden Museum, and a male specimen in 
the Genoa Museum, both from Celebes. ‘These were the 
only two specimens I had then seen, and I thought it best to 
include them under one specific name. I have recently 
acquued two other female specimens, collected by Herr H. 
