214 BULLETIN OF WISCONSIN NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. \'OL. 1, NO. 4. 
of this leg marked with a Hue of black. Second leg with a short 
fringe under the patella and tibia. 
Our specimen is very much rubbed. The clypeus seems to 
have been covered with fawn-colored hairs. On the sides of the 
cephalothorax are many white hairs, which are also found above 
the first row of eyes, and at the anterior end of the abdomen. 
The species must be distinguished by the lirst leg and the palpus. 
We have one male from Arizona. 
PcUcncs coccafus Hentz. 
IS-io. Attus coccatus, . Tour. Bost. Soc. Xat. Hist., \o\. W 
18T5. Attus coccatus, id.,cJ.Coll. Hentz's Arachn- ^^ rit., p. 65. 
1888. Habroccstum coccatuui,d. Xorth Amer. Attidae. Peck- 
ham, p. <:)(». 
(S , Length, 5 mm. Length of third leg. <> mm. Legs, 3412. 
First leg longer than second by two-thirds of tarsus. Third leg 
longer than fourth by tarsus. 
d. Length, 4.3 mm. Length of third leg, 4.4 mm. 
Quadrangle of eyes equally wide in front and behind. First 
row straight, middle eyes subtouching, lateral slightly separated 
from middle eyes, and rather less than one-half as large. Eyes 
of third row nearly as large as lateral eyes of first row. placed 
equally distant from each other and from lateral borders. Clypeus 
two-thirds as high as middle eyes of first row. Maxillae small, 
rounded. Labium very small, rounded, about as wide as long, 
less than half as long as maxillae. Anterior coxae separated 
by fully the width of the labium. Sternum oval. The femur 
of the first leg of the male has, at the distal end, two stout 
brushes of hair : and on the inner side of the tibia, two long 
flattened apophyses or strong spines : while the third leg has the 
distal end of the femur enlarged, and has, on the dorsal surface 
of the patella, a little ridge and a weak apophysis. 
The cephalothorax is black, with some brownish hairs over 
the first row of eyes, and some white hairs on the thoracic part. 
The abdomen is black, more or less covered with whitish hairs, 
which form (sometimes not distinctly ) a white basal band which 
extends on to the sides, a transverse curved white band across 
the middle, a central diamond-shaped white spot behind this, and 
two short white lines just above the spinnerets. The clypeus 
is covered with short, brilliant red hairs : where these are rubbed 
off it is brown. The falces are brown. The legs are brown, 
the first being the darkest. They all have blackish longitudinal 
bands on the femoral joints. The femur of the first has two 
stiff brushes of dark-colored hair, one on the anterior and one 
