1896.] BUTTERFLIES OF HE FAMILY HESPERIID#, 33 
that the anal extremity of the abdomen is white, which is not the 
case in G. minima, Holl. 
118. G. suBracatus, Mab. (Plate II. fig. 11.) 
Cobalus subfacatus, Mab. Bull. Soc. Ent. France, (6) vol. ix. 
p- elxviii (1889). 
Hab, Sierra Leone (Mabille). 
This little species is not white at the end of the abdomen, nor 
has it the interrupted white line along the inner margin of the 
secondaries which is conspicuous in G@. abure, Ploetz. The lower 
side in the type, which is before me, is more prevalently tawny on 
the costa and at the apex of the primaries, as well as on the disk 
of the secondaries. Otherwise it closely approximates G. abure, 
Ploetz, var. diversata, Holl. 
119. G. MINIMA, sp. nov. (Plate IV. fig. 24.) 
6. Primaries and secondaries on the upperside black. The 
primaries are ornamented by two minute spots near the end of the 
cell, of which the lower one is the larger. Immediately below this 
spot, in interval 2, is a moderately large sublunate transparent 
spot, and beyond this in the same series, in intervals 3 and 4, a 
small spot in each interval. Beyond the cell there is a minute 
subapical spot. The secondaries have a very small and obscure, 
scarcely visible, translucent spot at the end of the cell. The 
primaries and secondaries on the underside are blackish, with 
The the inner margin of the primaries slightly laved with fulvous. 
secondaries are obscurely marked with purplish hoary scales. The 
cilia, both on the upper and lower side, are pale yellowish fuscous. 
The palpi are black on the upperside, yellowish underneath. The 
thorax and abdomen on the lower side are blackish. 
Expanse 19-20 mm. 
Hab. French Congo (Mocquerys). 
This small species is allied to G. subfacatus, Mab., but appears 
to be quite distinct. 
120. G, MocQuUERYSII, sp. nov. (Plate V. fig 10.) 
3. The upperside of the body, the primaries, and the second- 
aries are black. The primaries are ornamented with three 
minute subapical spots in the usual position. In some specimens 
these spots have a tendency to become obsolete. There are two 
minute white translucent spots at the end of the cell in the 
primaries, and just below them in interval 2 a subquadrate spot. 
On vein 1, near the middle in interval 1, is a small subtriangular 
spot, in interval 3, beyond the end of the cel], a moderately large 
subquadrate spot. In the male on the secondaries there is a large 
translucent spot at the end of the cell, aud two similar elongated 
spots beyond the end of the cell on either side of vein 3 at its 
origin. On the underside the primaries are greenish ochraceous, 
with the inner half of the wing broadly laved with blackish, 
Proc. Zoot. Soc.—1896, No. III. 3 
