96 ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY 
One female taken near Falls Church, Va., 23 June, 1904, 
in web of a Lathrodectes mactans; A. trigonum in the same web. 
It is our largest eastern species of the genus, and very distinct 
by nearly uniform black color. 
Dipoena tibialis n. sp. 
Cephalothorax blackish, black on eye region; mandibles and palpi 
pale yellowish; legs reddish-yellow, anterior femora very bright, patellae 
and tibiae i and ii all black, as well as tip of metatarsi i and ii, tibiae 
and metatarsi iv black on tips; sternum black; abdomen dull black^ 
above and below. Cephalothorax slender, eye region very high and 
projecting over the concave clypeus. P. M. E. less than diameter apart, 
plainly farther from nearly equal P. S. E.; A M. E. slightly larger than 
P. M. E., and about two diameters apart, much closer to the slightly 
smaller A. S. E. Palpi heavy. Legs rather short; abdomen oblong- 
elliptical, the broad tip extending much beyond spinnerets. 
Length 3.5 mm. 
Two females from Olympia, Washington. Readily known 
by contrasting colors of the legs. 
Crustulina pallipes n. sp. 
Cephalothorax and sternum dark red-brown, abdomen dark brown 
above, almost black beneath, spinnerets pale, and sometimes a pale 
dot each side of them; legs pale yellowish or reddish-yellow. Cephalo- 
thorax short and broad, elevated in eye region; P. M. E. about diameter 
apart, and as far from the barely equal P. S. E. ; A. M. E. scarcely as large 
as P. M. E., fully diameter apart, and closer to A. S. E.; quadrangle of 
M. E. rather broader behind than in front, and a little broader than 
high; clypeus concave; mandibles slender, longer than height of clypeus; 
sternum barely longer than broad, and broadly rounded or almost truncate 
between the hind coxae, its surface is scabrous. Legs slender, but rather 
short, first pair but little longer than fourth, all rather heavily clothed 
with hairs and bristles. Abdomen very broad, sometimes fully as broad 
or broader than long. 
Length 2.2 mm. 
Several females from Olympia, Washington (Kincaid). 
Gonglydium kincaidi n. sp. 
Cephalothorax yellow-brown, black around eyes, a black marginal 
seam, and a black median line; legs and mandibles pale yellowish, ster- 
num darker brown: abdomen black above and below; on dorsum there 
is a submedian row each side of five transverse white marks, nearly touch- 
ing each other and the apical pair connected. Cephalothorax rather 
broad, head scarcely elevated; P. M. E. one and one-half diameter apart, 
and as far from the equal P, S. E-, A. M. E. small and close together. 
