164 JOORNAL, BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Vol. XIII. 
from that island and from Batjan, recorded by Kirby from 
Ternate also; from which it differs in being smaller, and on the 
UPPERSIDE and UNDERSIDE of both wings in the broad discal pure 
white band of that species being obsolete and barely traceable. 
Described from four males and cne female captured by Mr. 
W. Doherty in November, 1897. Mr. Hewitson in Journ. Linn, 
Soc. Lond., Zoology, vol. viii, p. 147 (1865), records A. artemis, 
Felder, described originally from Luzon, and apparently confined to 
that island of the Philippine Arehipelago, from “Sulla,” (as 
well as from Batchian, Gilolo, Morty and Menado), which is pro- 
bably a variant in spelling of the Sula Archipelago, though at 
page 148 of the same paper he speaks of “Sula.” There is, however, 
the Sulu Archipelago between the Philippines and Borneo, as well as 
the Sula Archipelago, of which Mangoli is one of the islands, to the 
east of Celebes. _Hewitson probably refers to the latter. 
Subfamily ELymyiwaz, 
8. ELYMNIAS ( Melynias) SAUERI, Distant. Plate DD, 
igen 2 
E, saiieri, Distant, Rhop. Malay., p.65,n. 7, pl. ix, fig. 8, male (1882); Melynias sauert 
(part), Moore, Lep, Ind., vol. ii, p. 161, pl. exl, fig. 2, male (1894), 
Hasirat: Province Wellesley ; Tenasserim (Distant) ; Tenasserim; 
Province Wellesley, Malay Peninsula ( Moore); Daunat Range, 
Tenasserim, Burma, March; Perak, Malay Peninsula (coll. de Nicéville), 
EXxpanse: 2, 3°6 inches. 
DescrieTioN: FEMALE. UPpsrsIpe, forewing with the base and 
the apex reddish-brown, the disc black; costa irregularly spotted 
with white; the disc crossed by six bluish-white streaks, the anterior 
streak short and oval, the second long, the third still longer than 
She second, inwardly widened out into an oval portion, the fourth, 
fifth and sixth increasing in length, inwardly becoming ochreous- 
whitish ; the sutural area bearing posteriorly a narrow ochreous-whitish 
Tine. Aindwing reddish-brown, with lengthened ochreous-whitish 
streaks between all the veins, these streaks being all more or 
less irrorated with blackish. UNpsrstpx, both wings marbled with 
black as in the male, but the ground-colour much paler, being 
achreous-whitish, 
Dr. Moore (l.c.) says that the female of /. sauerz is the H. humstleri, 
Honrath, I have no idea from whence Dr. Moore got this idea, 
