580 MR. J. H. LEECH ON THE [DcC. 18 



at the apex with orange-red. The head, thorax, abdomen, antennae, 

 and legs black. Expanse 1^ inch. 



Sab. Aola. 



A beautiful species, allied to S. euehromiella. Walk., but very 

 distinct. 



Fam. Hyponometjtid^. 



.53. CORINEA MATHEWI. 



Corinea mathewi, Butl. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 5, xx. p. 414. 

 Two specimens, identical with those in the British Museum from 

 Malaya. 



EXPLAIfATION OF PLATE XXIX. 



Fig. 1. Eusemia siriella, c?, n. sp., p. 571. 



2. Cleis iienia, $ , n. sp., p. 672. 



3. Callidrepana argentifera, cJ , n. sp., p. 574. 



4. Phalera peruda, (S , n. sp., p. 574. 



5. Alcides latona, cS , p- 577. 



6. Satara woodfordi, S> n. sp., p. 576. 



7. Bociraza vacuna, n. sp., p. 576. 



8. Sij>pharara woodfordi, n. sp., p. 579. 



3. On the Lepidoptera of Japan and Corea. — Part II. 

 Heterocera, Sect. I.' By J. H. Leech, B.A., F.R.G.S., 

 F.L.S., RZ.S., F.E.S., &c. 



[Eeceived November 26, 1888.] 

 (Plates XXX.-XXXII.) 



I must apologize for the tardy appearance of the second part of 

 this paper, which has been delayed in order to make it as complete 

 as possible by acquiring more material. Since leaving Japan, in 

 1886, I have received many valuable consignments of Lepidoptera, 

 both from natives iu my employ and also from Europeans interested 

 in Entomology, especially from the Rev. F. Andrews of Hakodate 

 and Mr. Manley of Yokohama. 



Last April we received the news of the death of that most inde- 

 fatigable entomologist, Mr. Henry Pryer, who had long resided in 

 Japan and devoted all his leisure to natural history. To Mr. 

 Pryer we are indebted for the discovery of the majority of the 

 Lepidoptera peculiar to Japan'^. Although his conclusions, owing 

 to his complete isolation from libraries and museums, were frequently 

 erroneous, yet his work was characterized by that common sense 

 which is to be found in the work of so many practical field-natu- 

 ralists. I was fortunate enough to procure the whole of Mr. Pryer's 

 entomological collections, with the exception of part of the Deltoids 

 and Pyrales, by purchase, and they form an important part of 

 the material for the present paper. Out of 38 species which I now 



' For Part I. see P.'Z.S. 1887, p. 398. 



^ A list of Japanese Lepidoptera, referred to in this paper as ' Pryer's 

 Catalogue,' will be found in the Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan, 

 vols. xi. and xii. 



