612 MESSRS. GODMAN AND SALVIN [NoV, 16, 



at the anal angle of the prunaries beneath, and in having only one 

 ocellus on the secondaries, which ia not visible on the upperside. 



Terinos alurgis, sp. nov. 



Exp. 3-3 in. 



Wings vivid purple, with large black patch passing through the 

 middle of the cell and curving round till it meets the centre of the 

 outer margin of the anterior, and extending downwards to the pos- 

 terior wing, of which it occupies the apical third, primaries with a 

 subapical fulvous mark, secondaries with the anal half of the outer 

 margin tinged with the same colour, and crossed with a double band 

 of purple spots ; beneath reddish brown, crossed by undulating silvery 

 grey bands, secondaries with a band of faintish brown spots crossing 

 the wing beyond the cell. 



Mus. nostr. 



Allied to T. terpander, Hew., but with the dark patch of the pri- 

 maries black instead of brown, and the j)urple of a bluer tint. The 

 primaries are not nearly so falcate, nor does the centre of the outer 

 margin of the secondaries project so much ; the blue lunate markings 

 of these wings comes much nearer the outer margin. 



■o" 



Doleschallia dascon, sp. nov. (Plate LVI. fig. 3.) 



cJ . Exp. 3-4 in. 



Brownish red ; apical half of primaries blackish, crossed heyond 

 the cell by a broadish blue transverse stripe partially broken into 

 spots, extending from the costa towards the outer margin ; near the 

 costa are two small subapical white dots ; costa and outer margin of 

 secondaries dark brown. Beneath rusty brown, with a transverse 

 narrow dark band crossing the middle of both wings ; a bent whitish 

 band about the centre of the cell, beyond which is a dark subtri- 

 augular spot enclosed by a narrow reddish hue; a conspicuous white 

 spot on the costa near the apex, and six very small subparallel to the 

 margin ; two ocelli on the secondaries (one near the anal angle, the 

 other towards the apex), and a greyish spot towards the end of 

 the cell. 



Mus. nostr. 



Two males but no female of this species are in the collection. 



Doleschallia dascylus, sp. nov. (Plate LVI. fig. 4.) 



cJ . Exp. 3' 5 in. 



Black, basal third of primaries bright ferruginous ; four subapical 

 white spots, below which are two or three blue ones, the top one 

 much the largest, the third almost, sometimes quite, obsolete ; the 

 basal half of the secondaries dark reddish brown ; beneath like the 

 preceding species, but much darker. 



$ . Like the male, with a broad white band crossing the end of the 

 cell of the primaries, at the upper and inner edge of which is a small 

 black spot; the blue submarginal spots are less conspicuous; beneath 

 paler than the male, a broad whitish grey band commencing at the 



