122 MESSES. H. J. ELWES AND JAMES EDWAEDS: 



to ft aurivittata, and it is, probably, the species upon which Watson bases his 

 assertion (Hesp. Ind. p. 149) that the fringe of the hind wing in aurivittata is not 

 invariably brown. 



Hah. Khasias (Hamilton) ; E. Pegu (Doherty) ; Tenasserim (Bingham). 



! Celjsnorrhinus aurivittata. (Plate XXII. figs. 3, 3 a.) 



Plesioneura aurivittata, Moore, P. Z. S. 1878, p. 843, pi. liii. fig. 2. 

 Kerana aurivittata, Watson, Hesp. Ind. p. 149 (1891). 



The best points for distinguishing this species from dhanada, Moore, lie in the deep 

 yellow spot near the tornus of the fore wing, which forms the end of the pale band, 

 and the unchequered brown fringe of the hind wing ; in these respects it resembles the 

 aurivittata var. cameroni of Distant, which, however, is easily distinguished by the 

 difference in the pale band on the fore wing set forth in the foregoing table. Watson's 

 statement that the fringe of aurivittata is not invariably brown on the hind wing 

 leaves one in doubt whether the localities which he gives for that insect really refer 

 to the aurivittata of Moore and of this paper or to ft affinis. 



Dr. Staudinger sends from Kina Balu, Borneo, a single female specimen, which differs 

 from aurivittata as follows ; — The pale spots in cells 6, 7, and 8 of the fore wing are 

 unequal, that in cell 7 being at least twice as large as the minute punctiform ones in 

 cells 6 and 8 ; the pale spot in the cell of the fore wing reaches two millimetres further 

 inward than that in cell 2, and the hind wing below has a narrow yellow spot next the 

 transverse vein and a subterminal series of suffused indistinct yellow spots, of which the 

 strongest are two near the apex of cell 1 b. 



Hah, Nagas, Upper Burrnah (Doherty); Tavoy (Pitman); Andamans (fide Swinhoe). 



! CELuENORRHINUS ladana. 



Carystns ladana, Butler, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond. 1870, p. 502; id. Lep. Exot. p. 170, pi. lix. fig. 1 

 (1874). 



Hob. Perak (Doherty). 



Cel^norrhinus batchianus, n. sp. (Plate XVIII. fig. 10, 6 ). 



6 . Upperside dark brown : fore wing with a somewhat narrow pale yellow oblique 

 band from the upper edge of the cell to vein 2, of which latter it adjoins the preapical 

 fourth ; the inner edge of this band is practically regular. Underside similar to the 

 upperside, but somewhat paler. Fringes brown. Antennas brown above, grey-brown 

 beneath, the apiculus whitish or yellowish on the underside. Body and legs con- 

 colorous with the wings. 



2 . Similar to the male, but a little larger and paler, and having in cell 1 a of the 

 fore wing a triangular yellow spot adjoining the lower edge of the yellow spot in cell 

 2 beyond its middle and reaching less than halfway across the cell. On the under- 



