112 DR, A. G. BUTLER ON BUTTERFLIES (Jan. 14, 
19. PYRAMBEIS CARDUI. 
Papilio cardui, Linneus, Faun. Suec. p. 276 (1761). 
3, Chilindi (8 miles S. of Karonga), W. coast of Lake Nyasa, 
March Ist, 1895. 
“Painted Lady” (&. C.). 
20. HYPANARTIA SCHENELA. 
Eurema scheneia, Trimen, Trans. Ent. Soc. London, 1879, p. 329. 
¢, Nyankowa Mt., 6500 ft. alt., April 9th, 1895. 
“ Scarlet Admiral” (R. C.). 
The colouring of Hypanartia must be very fugitive ; for speci- 
mens never come to hand with scarlet bands. As I have already 
suggested, this will probably prove to be a seasonal form of 
H. happomenes. 
21. PsSHUDARGYNNIS HEGEMONE. 
Argynnis hegemone, Godart. Enc. Méth. ix. p. 258 (1819). 
Jaera duodecimpunctata, Snellen, Tijd. voor Ent. 2nd ser. part 7, 
pl. i. figs. 1, 2 (1872). 
3, Kondowi, Isower Nyika, W. of Lake Nyasa, April Sth; 
9, Kondowi, 4110 feet alt., April 11th, 1895. 
“ Silver-tipped Fritillary. 9Q full of bright green eggs” (R. C.). 
Nyasa-land appears to be the headquarters of this rare butterfly, 
which for many years was unrepresented in the Museum collection ; 
it never comes in numbers, but collections from Nyasa usually 
contain one or, rarely, two examples, and, as a rule, of the male 
sex. 
22. HAMANUMIDA DAEDALUS. 
Papilio dedalus, Fabricius, Syst. Ent. p. 482 (1775). 
3g, Lower Nyika, W. of Lake Nyasa, Feb. 2nd, 1895. 
“Dark grey and white Fritillary ” (2. C.). 
23. NEPTIS AGATHA. 
Papilio agatha, Cramer, Pap. Exot. iv. pl. ecexxvii. A, B (1782). 
3, Henga, W. of Lake Nyasa, Jan. 30th; 9, Cheni-Cheni 
Mt., 5700 feet alt., Nyika, April 17th, 1895. 
“ White Admiral. @ full of bright green ova” (R. C.). 
24, NEPTis INcoNGRUA, sp. n. (Plate VI. fig. 2.) 
Q. Upper surface dark olivaceous brown, the fringes black at 
the extremities of the veins, white between them: primaries with 
a minute subcostal white point near the end of the cell, two 
(elongated) immediately beyond the cell, and a fourth below the 
latter in the lower radial interspace; seven white spots in three 
groups crossing the dise much as in NV. marpessa—three subapical 
(the first small), two on the median interspaces, and two, separated 
by the submedian vein, near external angle: secondaries crossed 
beyond the middle by a tolerably regular white belt, separated by 
