576 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ACADEMY OF [NoV., 



Phrurolithus •^p- 



Two specimens, both females, from the White Mountains, first 

 Ruidoso camp, latter half of July. Very near P. pacjnatus 

 Emer. , and quite possibly identical ; a male from Las Vegas, 

 February. 



Syspira sp. 



One immature specimen from a deep hole in the ground, Janu- 

 ary 24, at Mesilla Park. Like aS'. tigrma but paler, yet may, be 

 identical; both of the described species come from Lower Cali- 

 fornia, and this is the first record of the genus in our country. 



AGALENID^. 

 Agalena longistylus n. sp. 



Cephalothorax pale yellowish, with a brown stripe each side, 

 broadest behind, leaving a pale median area, narrower behind; side 

 margins narrowly brown; eyes on black spots; mandibles yellowish 

 brown; sternum yellowish, broadly margined with brown ; legs 

 pale yellowish, femora marked with oblique brown spots, tibise 

 and metatarsi brown at tips; abdomen brown, a broad pale area 

 above, enclosing a brown basal spear-mark ; venter yellowish 

 brown, a brown line on each side; upper spinnerets brown, last 

 joint long and slender like that of A. ncevia. Structure similar to 

 A. ncevia, but the stylet of the male palpus is very much longer, 

 making two full circles, the outside process is proportionally larger 

 and sharper pointed, the tibia extends over the base of tarsus as 

 in ^. n<evia. 



Length c? 7 mm. 



One male from first Ruidoso camp, White Mountains, August 

 10 (Townsend). 



Agalena naevia Hcntz. 



Agalena nmvia Hentz, Proc. Bost. Soc. N. H., Vol. Y, p. 465 (1847). 

 One small male from Eagle creek. White Mountains, August. 

 The stylus is of the usual length, a trifle moi-e than one circle; the 

 femora are unmarked. 



Cicurina arcuata Kcyserling. 



Cicurina arcuata Keyserling, Verb, zool.-bot. Ges. Wien, 1884, p. 460. 

 One female from Las Vegas Hot Springs, January. 



