620 MR. F. MOORE ON BENGALESE LEPIDOPTERA. [May 23, 



Genus Angerona. 



Angerona pallicostaria, u. sp. 



Male greenish grey : fore wing with the exterior margin broadly 

 ashy black, bordered within with blackish fleckles, which are also 

 dispersed along the posterior margin on a reddish ground ; two short 

 yellow streaks from the posterior angle ; reniform mark distinct : 

 hind wing ashy black, somewhat whitish basally, with a broad yel- 

 lowish anal band. Head, thorax, and abdomen greenish grey, the 

 latter fleckled with black. Underside paler ; both wings minutely 

 speckled with black on their basal half ; each with a rather large 

 black discal spot. 



Expanse 2 inches. 



Bengal. In Coll. A. E. Russell. 



Genus Omiza, Walk. 

 Omiza pachiaria, Walk. Cat. Lep. Het. B. M. xx. Geom. p. 247. 



Genus Panisala, n. g., Moore. 



Mule. Palpi small, compressed, densely pilose ; third joint mi- 

 nute, conical. Antennae very broadly pectinated to near the tips. 

 Legs slender, smooth ; hind tibise incrassated in the middle, armed 

 with four long spurs. Body slender ; abdomen extending to three- 

 fourths the length of the hind wing. Wings broad : fore wing trun- 

 cated at the apex ; costa nearly straight ; exterior margin very ob- 

 lique, slightly convex in the middle ; angle rather acute : hind wing 

 subquadrate ; exterior margin truncated and concave anteriorly to 

 near the middle, where it is angled, thence to the anal angle nearly 

 straight. 



Panisala truncataria, n. sp. 



Male brownish testaceous, darkest exteriorly, minutely black- 

 fleckled : fore wing with two reddish-black transverse oblique sub- 

 basal lines, and a double anteriorly bent discal line ; a submarginal 

 row of whitish dark-exterior-bordered lunules, before which on the 

 posterior margin is a whitish patch : hind wing with one subbasal 

 and a double discal reddish-black line, the former parallel with the 

 second line on the fore wing ; a submarginal row of white lunules 

 with black exterior borders. Both wings with a small black discal 

 spot. 



Expanse 2| inches. 



Bengal. In Coll. A. E. Russell. 



Genus Eurymene, Dup. 



Eurymene inustaria, n. sp. 



Female yellow : both wings covered with transverse narrow partly 

 confluent ferruginous strigse, which are darkest on the middle of the 

 posterior margin upward, whence there is an outwardly oblique 

 pale-bordered streak extending towards the apex ; a small blackish 



