4.90 MR. C. WITH ON PHALANGIIDA 
Seen from the front, the tubercle narrows beneath the eye and 
is as high as broad. ‘The crest is grooved and provided with five 
long hairs on each side. Diameter of the eyes both less than 
the distance between them, and than the space from their lower 
edge to the base of the tubercle. 
Basal joint of the antenna once and a half as long as broad, 
aud smooth. Procursus max. internus two-branched and pale; 
its lower edge bears dark teeth. The femora of the palps are 
as long as the tibie+patelle and the tarsi. Beneath and at 
the base of the patelle they are toothed. Patelle hairy and 
toothed. Tibi four times as long as broad. Tarsi with few 
teeth below, and the femora of the legs hairy and with the usual 
small teeth. 
F. [=9 (46), W=17, JI1=8 (438), 1V=12 mm. Body4mm. 
Second joint of antenna 1} mm. long. 
On both sides of the tubercle the body is white; the hindmost 
part of the cephalothorax and the abdomen is yellowish and 
brown, the three colours merging into each other. A dark 
depressed spot on each side of the tubercle. Tubercle black, and 
connected with the front by a broadening black band. Five or 
six light yellow spots are placed in a row on each side of the 
scutum near the middle. Last two free dorsal segments black, 
with a longitudinal white spot on each side. Free ventral 
segments yellowish-white with indistinct black spots. First pair 
of cox white, the second black, the third and fourth white at 
the base, and black spotted with yellow at their extremities. 
The trochanters and the femora of the palps are black; their 
terminal joints, the antenne, and the mouth-organs are yellow, 
the legs brownish, and the points of the second and fourth tibie 
white. The spine is black. 
One female (?) from Silouri. 
GAGRELLA CRUX, 0. sp. 
Q@. Cephalothorax almost triangular. Tubercle placed near the 
articulation, since the next last segment of the cephalothorax 1s 
small. The last segment well developed. ‘The five segments 
of the scutum marked by darker transverse striz. The body 
granular above, with the exception of some parts of the cephalo- 
thorax, the spine, and the tubercle; the coxe are almost smooth, 
and the free ventral segments completely so. The cephalothorax 
