320 Mr. L. B. Proiit on neio 



group, termen sliglitly smootlier and more regular; SC^~^ 

 very shortly stalked or exceptionally just separate, SC^ in 

 one examined specimen anastomosing slightly with SC^'~^; 

 whitish, with the irroration fairly close but rather uneveji, 

 olive-grey and ochreous-brown, the general tone less warm 

 than in most o£ the brown species ; cell-spot moderate ; 

 lines somewhat thickened at ihe costa, especially the median/ 

 w^hich is here op[)Osite, or almost proximal to, the cell-dot, 

 then makes a moderately strong curve just outside or across 

 it, then runs straighter than in most of the allies (approxi- 

 mately parallel with termen) to hind margin ; the other 

 lines somewhat as \\\ fraternaria^ Guen., but with the post- 

 median more inbent in front of R^, its distal duplication 

 feeble throughout, the teeth of the subterminal shorter and 

 more rounded. 



Hind iving with the termen only moderately crenulate; 

 cell-dot not strong ; median line rather thin, crossing cell- 

 dot or well proximal thereto; outer markings normal. 



Both wings beneath whitish. Fore wing with the costa 

 ochreous, with some dark spots and irroration; the irroration 

 on the rest of the wing mostly weak ; cell-dot and ante- 

 median line indicated, also the anterior part of postmedian ; 

 a distal bordering o£ dense dark irroration about 3 mm. 

 wide (slightly more anteriorly) from costa to M^, often 

 including at its proximal edge a denser dark line. Hind 

 wing almost unmarked, except for a narrow incomplete 

 subterminal shade, which does not reach abdominal margin 

 and oftenest fades out about the middle of the wing. 



Paraguay; Sapucay [IV. Foster), type in coll. L. B. 

 Front, dated 29 October, 1903, many other ^ (^ in various 

 collections. Also occurs in Brazil (Sao Faulo, Castro, 

 Forto Alegre) and in N. Argentina (Misiones). 



Seems to have been constantly misidentified as transitaria, 

 Walk., of which the type (from San Domingo) is shaped as 

 '\Vi(jx^\\\\Y^ fraternaria or rather longer-winged. 



The ? ? (S.E. Brazil, ex coll. E. D. Jones) are rather 

 larger and paler^ weakly marked. 



18. Pseudomiza argeniilmea eugraphes, subsp. n. 



S .—38 mm. 



Both wings above and beneath more strougly marked 

 than in a. argenti/inea, Moore (Froc. Zool. Soc. Loud. 186^, 

 p. 617, as Drepanodes), from N. India, the "narrow silvery 

 band ^' (which in the Sikkim and Klnisi specimens before me 

 widens appreciably on the fore wing posteriorly) reduced to 

 an inconspicuous line ; fore wing with the oblique line 



