228 
LEPIDOPTMRA INDIO A. 
Museum, Calcutta, from Cherra Punji, Assam, aud in Major Marshall’s from Shil¬ 
long.” (De Niceville, Butt. Ind. 136). Specimens were also obtained at Cherra 
Punji by the late Mr. W. S. Atkinson, and by Col. Godwin-Austen. 
Indo-Malayan Allied Species op Neokina. —The other known species of this 
genus are N. Lourii, Doubleday and Hewitson, Gen. D. Lep. p. 369, pi. 61, fig. 
4 (1851). Distant, Rhop. Malay, p. 416, pi. 37, fig. 3 (1886). Staudinger, 
Exot. Schmett. p. 223, pi. 79, <S (1887). Mr. W. Doherty (J. A. S. Bengal, 1889, 
124) says, “ I have often observed N. Lowii in Borneo, the Malay Peninsula, and 
Eastern Java (where, however, the local representative may be distinct). It is 
continually changing its perch, flitting round and round the passer-by, and alighting 
with the wings partly or wholly open. When flying, it has the strongest possible 
resemblance to Papilio Helenns, and it may possibly be advantageous for a scarce, 
rather weak-flying insect of Morphid or Satyrid affinities to resemble a common 
Papilio of powerful and irregular flight.” Habitat. —Malay Peninsula; Nias; 
Sumatra; Borneo.— N. Patria, Leech, The Entomologist, 1891, p. 25. Habitat.— 
W. China.—A. P'1 *incesa , Staudinger, Iris, 1889, p. 36. Habitat.- —Palawan. 
Genus CGELITES. 
Ccelites , Westwood in Doubleday and Hewitson’s Genera of Diurnal Lep. p. 867 (1851). Distant, 
Bhop. Malay, p. 45 (1882). Marshall and de Niceville, Butt, of India, etc. i. p. 100 (1883). 
Imago. —Male. Forewing triangular; costa much arched, apex rounded, exterior 
margin somewhat concave, very slightly scalloped, posterior angle rounded, posterior 
margin short; costal vein perceptibly swollen ; cell long, extending more than half 
length of the vying ; first subcostal branch emitted at about one-fourth before and 
second branch close to end of the cell; discocellulars concave, upper short and bent 
close to subcostal, the upper radial from the angle, the lower radial from the middle; 
the middle median branch emitted at one-fourth and lower branch at more than half 
before end of cell ; submedian straight. Hindwing short, quadrangularly-ovate, the 
exterior margin being slightly scalloped and angular in the middle ; abdominal margin 
long ; subcostal vein much arched ; cell extending to half the wing ; first subcostal 
branch emitted at about one-third before end of the cell; discocellulars outwardly 
oblique, upper shortest, radial from the angle ; two uj>per median branches from 
extreme end of the cell, lower branch at about one-third before the end; submedian 
straight, internal vein recurved. A large spatular-shaped glandular patch of blue- 
black lustreless scales situated broadly on both sides of the submedian vein near its 
base, overlapping which, and also extending partly along the outer side of the sub¬ 
median are numerous fine long black hairs. Female less concave below the apex of fore- 
