~ 
194 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 
ing it in the apical portion; dorsal margin pale ochreous, faintly tinged 
with roseate towards the base, deeply so towards the ciliæ, and with one 
or two distinct bright roseate spots at the base of the cilia. Near the 
base 1s a narrow oblique brown costal streak or band extending to the 
fold. About the middle, another wider one, the middle portion of which 
is rather reddish-ochreous than brown, and is tinged with roseate ; beyond 
the middle is another, which extends to one of the roseate patches at the 
base of the dorsal ciliæ. Each of the costal brown streaks is margined 
both before and behind with white, which is distinct on the costa, but is 
only distinct in some lights on the disc. In some lights the entire wing 
appears to be dusted with roseate, and with small reddish-brown spots. 
Ciliæ pale fuscous? (crisped by the gas-light so that I can not be certain). 
Alar ex. V3 of an inch. A single specimen taken at light in Kentucky in 
August. 
G. disco-ocellella, IN. sp. 
Dark brown, tinged with roseate or purplish; second joint of the 
palpi dark brown, ochreous-yellow along the inner surface ; third joint 
achreous yellow except the base, which is dark brown. Head echreous. 
brown ; antennæ brown. Thorax ochreous, with a narrow rather indistinct 
median brown streak. Primaries brown, tinged with- roseate or purple, 
and faintly streaked with ochreous within the inner margin, 444 with a 
yellowish-white spot-containing a black central dot at the end of the disc, a 
small black spot on the fold, and one about the middle of the wing, and 
‘with a few ochreous-yellow small spots around the apex between the 
nervules. Alar ex. 54 of an inch. Kentucky. Taken at the lamp im 
September. CR 
AGNIPPE, ge. 70. 
Head and face smooth, face retreating; palpi recurved, reaching 
beyond the base of the antennæ, the second joint somewhat enlarged 
towards its apex, the third pointed, and more than half as long as the 
second ; maxillary palpi minute; tongue rather short, scaled; antenna 
about half as long as the wings, simple, placed in front of the eyes, which 
are small and scarcely visible from in front or above. 
Anterior wings with a tuft of raised scales within the dorsal margin 
before the middle, lanceolate-ovate, pointed ; the costal attains the margin 
just behind the middle; discal cell long, rather narrow, closed by the 
gradual rounding of the subcostal and median into the short discal vein ; 
the subcostal sends three veins from near the end of the cell, two of which 
attain the margin before the apex, whilst the third or apical branch attains 
