206 Journal of the F.M.S. Museums. [Vov. VIII, 
Evidently very close to P. p.. rufa; Sharpe’s original 
descriptions of that race, founded on old and deteriorated 
specimens in the Leyden Museum having evidently misled 
Lord Rothschild, who had no Javan specimens available for 
comparison. 
133. Geocichla interpres (Temm.). 
Turdus interpres, Temm., Pl. Col. ti, no. 458 (1828). 
Geocichla interpres (Temm.); Seebohm, Cat. Birds Brit. 
Mus. v, p. 166 (1881); Vorderman, Nat. Tijd. Nederl. Ind. 
xlix, p. 409, no. 364 (1889); Van Oort, Notes Leyden Mus. 
XXXIl, p. 144 (1910); Robinson & Kloss, Journ. Fed. Malay 
States Mus. v, p. 56 (1914). 
a. 1%. Sandaran Agong, Korinchi Valley, Sumatra, 
2,450 feet. 7th June, 1914. [No. 1880.]| 
“Tris hazel, bill black, feet yellowish flesh, claws pinkish 
horn.” 
This specimen, which was the only one seen in the 
course of the expedition, was collected by one of our Dyaks 
in a patch of heavy jungle not far from the lake. Though 
recorded from Sumatra in many publications it does not 
appear to be contained in any of the more recent collections. 
In the Malay Peninsula it is very rare, only two 
specimens having been obtained in the last twenty years, one 
in the mountains of Trang, Siamese States, by Dr. Abbott, 
and a second on Gunong Tampin in Negri Sembilan 
(Robinson and Kloss, supra). In Java it appears to be fairly 
common, as also in Lombok, though it does not seem to have 
been met with in Bali as yet. 
The present specimen agrees well with our bird from the 
Malay Peninsula and with another from Sarawak. 
134. Zoothera andromedae (Temm.). 
Mytothera andromedae, Temm., Pl. Col. 11, no. 392 (1826). 
Geocichla andromedae (Temm.); Seebohm, Cat. Birds Brit. 
Mus. v, p. 163 (1881); Hartert, Nov. Zool. ili, pp. 555, 593 
(1896). 
Zoothera andromeda, Sharpe, Hand-list Birds, iv, p. 138 
(1903). 
(a iS acl, u oS mina, 3 2 ion, IK@xinclal iPealk, 
Sumatra, 7,300 feet. 25th April-roth May, 
1914. [Nos. 1160-1, 1483-4, 1509. ] 
“Adult male :—Iris brown, bill black, pale yellow at gape, 
feet purplish slate.”’ 
“Immature female:—Iris hazel, bill greyish horn, feet 
purplish pink.” 
These birds inhabited dark and narrow gullies, choked 
with vegetation, in the neighbourhood of our second camp on 
Expedition to Korinchi : 
