THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST. 163 
NOTE 4.—Catocala Walshii, Edwards, is still unknown to me. I 
Delieve the types perished in the Chicago fire. It must be nearly allied to 
unijuga. Mr. Edwards’ description of the fore wings, “ Primaries yellow- 
ish brown, clouded between the transverse lines with grey; markings 
indistinct, but similar to Uniguga, Walk; reniform ferruginous, in a pale 
circlet,” is not exhaustive, but it contains nothing contradicting Walker’s 
description of C. junctura. 
Catecala Arizone, Grote. 
Size large. Fore wings dentate, rather uniformly dark grayish brown 
with a glaucous shade over the more grayish median space. Median lines 
black and rather broad. A whitish shade before the brown-tinged, broadly 
bisannulate reniform. Sub-reniform rather small, pyriform, whitish brown, 
connected with the t. p. line, tending to become narrowly open.  T. p. 
line well produced opposite the cell, with two sub-equal rather prominent 
teeth. A not very deep but broadly marked sub-median sinus. The dark 
scales tend to connect with the t. a. line along the sub-median interspace. 
The grey sub-terminal shade, preceding the dentate dark line itself, is not 
erect, but runs obliquely backward to costa above vein 6. Secondaries 
pinkish red. Median band rather narrow, not much curved, nearly even, 
rounding and becoming narrower below vein 2, and terminating at vein 
1. Marginal band rather narrow, rather deeply excavate opposite the 
termination of the median band, and leaving a yellowish apical space 
tinged with red. Beneath largely pinkish red; the median whitish space 
on primaries also tinged with red inferiorly. The median band as on 
upper surface, and seen to terminate a very little before vein 1. Thorax 
and collar brownish, without perceptible lines. Expanse 80 m. m. 
I have received this species from Professor Townend Glover, of the 
Agricultural Department at Washington. It is labelled ‘Borders of 
Arizona and New Mexico.—Dr. Palmer.” It is apparently nearest to C. 
amatrix, than which it has more obscurely brown primaries and is perhaps 
intermediate in character between the group of C. amatrix and the Cali- 
fornian red-winged species, represented by C. californica. 
Note.—In my list of the species of Cafocala, p. 164, 1872, I 
enumerated 59 species of the genus from our Territory. The total num- 
ber must be now increased to 63. Of these 11, viz., S¢refchit Behr., 
adultera "Hinze, irene Behr., Walshii Edwards, uxor Guenee, zoe Behr., 
