220 /. H. Emerton, New England Spiders Identified since 1910. 



thickened spot a little more opaque than the rest of the skin, and 

 towcird the front roughened. On the under side the sternum is dark 

 and the abdomen is dark with two light stripes. This species should 

 be looked for among the White Mountains and northward. Figs. 

 II, II a. PI. II. 



Clubiona latifrons. new 



6 mm. long. Pale, only slightly darker on the head and mandibles. 

 The head is wide, nearly as wide across the eyes as the widest part of 

 the cephalo thorax. Fig. 12 b. PI. II. The mandibles are long and stout 

 in both sexes and have on the inner side three large teeth above the 

 claw and two below it. Fig. 12. The male palpi have the tarsus 

 and palpal organ small. The tibia resembles that of C. rubra, with 

 two short processes parallel to each other on the outer side. The 

 epigynum also resembles that of C. rubra. 



Plum Island, Ipswich, Mass., September. Dighton, Mass., Sep- 

 tember. 



Lycosa funerea Hentz. 



AUocosa funerea Banks. N. Y. Ent. Soc. 1904. 



A young female of this southern species has been found at 

 Lyme, Conn, among the straw along the shore. 



