ZooL— Vol. III.] BANKS— ARACHNIDA FROM CALIFORNIA. 345 



Dipcena pictipes n. sp. 



Cephalothorax bright yellowish, margin black, eyes on black spot; mandi- 

 bles reddish yellow; legs black and whitish; femora and patellae i and 11 

 white above, black beneath, femur 11 with a pale line, tibiae and metatarsi 

 black, former narrowly pale above, tarsi whitish; femora iii pale, with black 

 stripe on each side; femora iv pale, with black stripe on posterior side; 

 tibias III and iv pale above, black beneath, metatarsi black, tips of tibiae and 

 bases of metatarsi pale, tarsi pale. Sternum bright yellowish, with a narrow 

 black margin; abdomen black above and below, spinnerets pale. Posterior 

 eye-row straight or barely procurved, P. M. E. fully diameter apart, and 

 plainly farther from the equal P. S. E.; anterior eye-row straight, A. M. E. 

 larger than P. M. E., scarcely diameter apart, and rather closer to the smaller 

 A. S. E.; S. E. contiguous. Clypeus higher than the eye-region; sternum 

 broad, nearly as broad in front as long, sides rounded, blunt-pointed between 

 hind coxae; leg i longest; iv and 11 subequal; abdomen elliptical, one and 

 one-half times longer than broad, not very high. 



Length 2.1 mm. 



One specimen from Claremont (Baker). 



Euryopis calif ornica n. sp. 



Plate XXXIX, Figs. 23 and 36. 



Cephalothorax yellow-brown, eyes on black spots; mandibles pale yellow- 

 ish, legs pale, mottled with black, mostly above, but the femora are below 

 near tip; the tibial marks are more or less connected above; sternum pale. 

 Abdomen silvery white, with a dark triangular spot in middle of dorsum, 

 black on its posterior angle, there is also a black mark on each side, near 

 tip of the abdomen, scarcely visible from above; venter silvery. 



Structure in general similar to that of E. funebre, but the markings of 

 legs different, and the abdominal spot very much smaller. 



Length 3.8 mm. 



One female from Los Angeles (Davidson). 



Euryopis funebre Hentz. Spid. U. S. 1875, p. 148. 

 San Francisco, one specimen (Troyer). 



Steatoda grandis Banks. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phil. 

 1901, p. 578. 



One female from Claremont (Baker). 



Lithyphantes tectus Keyserling. Spinn. Amer., Therid. 

 (i) 1884, p. 138. 



