2_i2 W, F. PüBCELL, 40 
Inferior Spinners short, each with 4 large fusules and a small inferior tooth at apex; median 
spinner raised on a tuberculate base. 
Length of cephalothorax -+- abdomen 6 l /s — 7 rnm. 
b) I ? from Steinkopf, Little Namaqualand, July 1904. Lighter in colour than the types. 
2. Callilepis Uneatipes n. sp. 
PI. XI, Fig. 29. 
I $ from between Kang and Khakhea, Kalahari, Bechuanaland Protectorate, December 1904. 
Colour brown ; densely reticulated and spotted with infuscate lines and dots, the head bordered 
on each side posteriorly by a black band ; the surface sparsely clothed with fine white and black hairs ; 
abdomen black, paler below, the hairs fine and dark ; legs black, with pale-yellowish longitudinal stripes 
and bands, the tarsi pale-yellowish; sternum yellowish, the margins narrowly blackened, the surface faintly 
infuscated ; coxae also yellowish, with faint infuscation. 
Cephalothorax much narrowed in front and low. Anterior row of eyes strongly procurved, 
the lateral eyes rather large, distant almost a diameter from the anterior margin, much larger than the 
small median eyes and placed quite close to them ; posterior row of eyes considerably wider than the anterior 
row and slightly recurved, the median eyes small, oblique, a little nearer to each other than to the lateral 
eyes, the latter a little larger than the medians but smaller than the anterior laterals. 
Legs short and robust, only the tarsi slender, the anterior pairs scopulate below on the tarsi and 
metatarsi ; metatarsi short and robust, I with a stout spine near base; tibia I stout, unspined. 
Inferior Spinners with only 2 large fusules at apex. 
Vulva as in PI. XI, Fig. 29. 
Length 3 mm. 
Dr. Schultze also collected 10 immature specimens of a third species of Callilepis from between 
Kang and Khakhea, Kalahari, which were too young for description. 
Genus Asemesthes E. Sim. 
1. Asemesthes aureus n. sp. 
Specimens. a) 14 subadult 66 and ?? from Kamaggas, Little Namaqualand, July and August 1904. 
Colour of integument brown to dark-brown, the 2 distal segments of the legs pale-yellowish to 
pale-testaceous, the abdomen also generally paler and then pale-brownish or brownish-yellow, its upper 
surface and upper portion of its lateral surfaces entirely covered by a dense coat of golden-yellow or 
somewhat orange -yellow, prone, feathery hairs, intermingled with sparsely scattered long black setae; 
cephalothorax similarly covered with white hairs, amongst which some yellow ones may be intermingled; legs 
more sparsely clothed with fine white hairs and numerous coarser black hairs and setae; soft skin on sides 
of cephalothorax and between the segments of the legs black. 
Anterior row of eyes strongly procurved, the small medians close to but not touching the very 
much larger lateral eyes ; posterior row of eyes a little narrower than the anterior row and very strongly 
recurved, much more so than the anterior row viewed from above, the median eyes smaller than the anterior 
