114 THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGISY. 
scales intermixed, and with two small oblique ccstal white streaks just 
behind the large brown spot; costal ciliae dark brown, dorsal ciliae- 
grayish. Adar ex. 34 inch. Several specimens captured in June resting: 
on forest trees, at Visalia, Kentucky. 
CLYMENE, @7. 7101. 
Clothed with longish hair-like scales, those of the head and face 
roughened, standing out in every direction, many of those of the anterior 
wings also standing out (or rather reversed, suggesting a resemblance to- 
the breed of chickens with reversed feathers). ; 
No tongue ; labial palpi short ; maxillary palpilong, three jointed, the 
second and third joints sub-equal, drooping together or sometimes folded. 
in the dead insect (folded in the living ?). Antennae more than half as. 
long as the wings, hairy, somewhat roughened in the living insect, carried 
projecting together straight in front ; eyes small, not visible from above. 
Forewings lanceolate ; there is a long semi-opaque space on the costal 
margin ; discal cell unclosed ; costal vein short ; subcostal nearly straight, 
passing to the apex, giving off to the costal margin four branches, the 
first from about the basal fourth, the second and longest from just before 
the middle and attaining the margin just before the other two, which are 
given off in the apical part of the wing ; the median passes nearly straight 
to the dorsal margin behind the apex, from about the basal fourth it gives. 
off a long branch which attains the margin just behind the vein itself, 
which is trifurcate in the apical part of the wing; fold very distinct ; sub- 
median furcate at base. 
Posterior wings lanceolate; costal vein almost coincident with the 
margin ; subcostal straight to the apex, sending to the costal margin two: 
short branches, the first behind the middle, the second in the apical por- 
tion ; median vein nearly straight to the dorsal margin behind the apex, 
sending to the dorsal margin two branches, one not far from the base, the 
other about the middle ; submedian distinct. Ciliae moderate. 
The imago is very shy and active, running very rapidly till it finds a 
place of concealment, and taking flight easily. The larva of the species. 
described below is unknown; the imago is abundant in May and June: 
upon the trunks of Beech trees. 
C. egerfasciella. LN. sp. 
Head luteous with intermixed dark brown scales; palpi dark grayish 
fuscous ; legs and body sordid luteous ; antennae sordid luteous, mixed. 
