1863.] 
129 
the middle of the wing; three other branches are given off, rather re¬ 
mote from the first, the apical branch being furcate, with both branches 
entering the costa behind the tip, Discal vein obliquely inclined to¬ 
wards the base, with two branches. The median vein with three rather 
long branches, the posterior arising nearly opposite the middle of the 
space between the 1st and 2d subcostal branches. Submedian, fur¬ 
cate at the base. 
Head smooth, broad in front, forehead rounded. No ocelli. Antennae 
filiform, about one-half as long as the fore wings, with joints closely 
set, basal joint short, (with short hairs in Ohauliodus.^) Labial palpi 
recurved, so as to equal the vertex; second joint subclavate, slightly 
thickened with scales towards the end; terminal joint cylindrical, 
slightly roughened, nearly equal in length to the second, pointed. No 
maxillary palpi. Tongue loanting. (In Gkauliodus^ short and naked.) 
C ? canicinctella. —Fore wings dirty whitish towards the base, apical half 
fuscous varied with blackish. An irregular whitish band near the tip, in¬ 
clined towards the base, margined externally with a short black line from 
the inner margin, and with two short exterior black dashes, one in the middle 
of the wing, one on the costa. The internal edge of the fuscous portion of the 
wing is inclined towards the tip and margined with whitish. The extreme 
apex is blackish and the cilia around it whitish sprinkled with black. Cilia 
fuscous. Hind wings fuscous. 
Head and labial palpi whitish; the terminal joint of the latter, with two 
fuscous rings, one about the middle and one at the tip. 
I have before me two mutilated specimens, one simply with a pair 
of wings, received from Mr. A. S. Packard, Jr., and numbered by 
him 790. 
In the specimen before me, the basal joints have been denuded by mites. 
