270 JV. Banks — Spiders and Mites from the Bermuda Islands. 



DRASSIDiE. 



Callilepis, sp. 



One immature specimen of a dark-colored species, from mouth of 

 Tucker's Island cave, 3 May. No. 2356. 



CLUBIONID^. 



Corinna, sp. 



Sevei*al immature specimens from Hungry Bay, April. No. 2334. 



Hypsinotus, sp. 



An immature specimen, very close' to, and perhaps identical with 

 H. pumilis Keys., from Porto Rico. No. 2309. 



Anyphsena Verrilli, sp. now 



Cephalothorax pale yellowish, darker in front, the clypeus and 

 mandibles red-brown ; sternum yellowish ; legs pale, more red- 

 brown on metatarsi and tarsi, especially of the anterior pairs. 

 Abdomen above and below pale, above with many rows of darker 

 hairs. The cephalothorax is rather short and broad ; the A. M. E. 



scarcely diameter apart, rather closer to the 

 equal A. S. E. ; P. M. E. somewhat larger, nearly 

 twice their diameter apart and about as far from 

 the nearly equal P. S. E. Posterior eye-row 

 strongly procurved, longer than the anterior eye- 

 Figure 2. — Anyphama row. Mandibles rather large and hairy, but. not 

 i, epigynum. p 0rr ect nor divergent, a little longer than the 

 patella of leg I. Legs of moderate length, and quite densely spined. 

 Ventral furrow about three-fourths the distance from the spinnerets 

 to the lung-slits ; abdomen about twice as long as broad, truncate 

 at base. 



Length $, 8.5 mm . 



One specimen from Walsingham, 3 May, 1901. I have also seen 

 specimens from parts of the West Indies. No. 2340. 



Eutichurus insulanus, sp. nov. 



Cephalothorax dull brownish yellow, eyes on black spots ; mandi- 

 bles red-brown ; sternum brownish yellow ; legs pale greenish ; 

 abdomen pale gray, rather darker above than below, blackish 

 around the spinnerets, the latter pale. The cephalothorax is rather 



