1&*8. ] PROCEEDINGS OF UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 405 



8. Julus hortensis (Wood). 



Common: Hagerstosvn; Indianapolis ; Connersville; New Harmony. 



9. Julus virgatus (Wood). 



Common: Bloomington ; Westfield; Connersville; Salem. 



10. Nemasoma stigmatosum (Braudt). 

 Bare : Bloomington. 



11. Nemasoma minutum (Brandt). 



Common: Bloomington; Indianapolis; Salem; New Providence. 

 A careful examination of the above two species has shown that they 

 should be put in the European genus — Nemasoma Koch. 



12. Callipus lactarius (Say). 



Abundant: Bloomington; La Fayette; Kokomo; "Westfield; Terre 

 Haute; Greencastle; Brookville; Salem; New Providence; Wyandotte. 



13. Campodes flavicornis Koch. 



Very common: Bloomington; La Fayette; Salem. 



14. Scotherpes lunatum (Harger). 

 Common: Bloomington; Salem. 



15. Scotherpes wyandotte, sp. nov. 



Diagnosis : Related to Cr. lunatum (Harger), but the color dark, 

 ocelli arranged in a triangular patch, and the body larger and more ro- 

 bust. 



Habitat: Wyandotte, Indiana. 



Type: U. S. National Museum. 



Description: Body stout, short, scarcely depressed. Dorsal plates 

 reticulated ; lateral carinas as in lunatum. Ocelli 16-4, in a triangular 

 patch. Yellowish-brown ; legs pale. Length, 10 mm ; width, 1.5 mm . 



This new species is described from a female which was found a few 

 miles north of Wyandotte Cave, Crawford County. 



16. Scotherpes bollmani (McNeill). 



Abundant: May field's, Neeld's, Truett's and Coon's Caves, Bloom- 

 ington ; Phitt's and Donehue's Caves, Bedford, Ind. 



17. Pseudotremia cavernarum (Cope). 



Wyandotte, Little Wyandotte, Bradford and Marengo Caves, Craw- 

 ford County, Ind. 



18. Pseudotremia cartereusis (Packard). 



Around the mouth of a well at the foot of the path leading from the 

 hotel, past Little Wyandotte Cave, I obtained five specimens of a Cras- 

 pedosoma that seem to agree with the description of Pseudotremia 

 cavernarum cartereusis Packard from Bat. X, and Zwiugler's Caves, 

 Kentucky. 



That this is a distinct species and not merely a variet yof C. caver- 



