218 BULLETIN OF WISCONSIN NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. VOL. 1, NO. 4. 
SO long. Labium as long as wide, and nearly half as long as 
maxillae. 
The clypeus is white with some fawn-colored hairs under the 
middle eyes which reach on to the upper part of the falces. The 
white of the clypeus extends in a band along the lower margin 
of the cephalothorax, passes up behind the dorsal eyes, and is 
continued forward, more or less distinctly, to the anterior lateral 
eyes. The cephalic plate and the sides are fawn-colored. The 
sides and base of the abdomen, and a median longitudinal band 
are wdiite, and the other parts reddish-brown. The legs and 
palpi, excepting the tarsi, are covered with short white hairs. 
We have one male sent to us by Prof. Cockerell, from Mesila 
Park, New ]\lexico. 
Pellenes Toi<iisendii, n. 
PI. I, fig. 9. 
?. Length, 5.5 mm. Legs, 3412, first a little the stoutest. 
The quadrangle of the eyes is one-fourth wider than long, and 
a little wider behind than in front. The front eyes are all plainly 
separated and form a strongly curved row, the middle being 
twice as large as the lateral. The second row is halfway between 
the other two. The third row is not so wide as the cephalothorax. 
The clypeus is two-thirds as wide as the middle eyes. The 
labium is more than half as long as the maxillae, which are 
rounded. 
The cephalothorax is covered with fawn-colored hairs. There 
IS a white band running from the clypeus up between the middle 
eyes, and then backward on the cephalic part, widening as it 
goes, until it fills all the space between the dorsal eyes. There 
is a wdiite band around the margin, which is joined behind by 
two white bands which run from the lateral eyes along the upper 
sides, and downward on the thoracic slope. The face is very 
striking. The first row of eyes is strongly curved, and from 
the outer side of each of the large middle eyes a broad brown 
streak runs outward and obliquely downward. The two middle 
eyes are separated by white hairs, which also cover the middle 
part of the clypeus and the spaces under the lateral eyes. The falces 
are brown and vertical. The abdomen has a fawn-colored region 
on each side of the dorsum, a white encircling band, which is 
jagged on the inner side, and, down the middle, a white band 
which is made up of a series of blunt arrowheads, which point 
forward. The palpi and legs are brown, with black spines and 
white hairs, the first legs being the darkest. 
While in the marking of the clypeus this species bears a strong 
resemblance to carolineiisis and sabiilosiis, Toivuscndii is distinct 
