220 BULLETIN OF WISCONSIN NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. VOL. 1, NO. 4. 
quite twice as large as the lateral, which are further from them 
than they are from each other. The clypeus is a little more 
than one-half as wide as the middle eyes. The maxillae are 
twice as long as the labium, and are rounded. 
The integument of the cephalothorax is black, with a short 
covering of yellow hairs. There are wide white bands on the 
sides, which unite behind, but do not run up on to the thorax. 
The margin has a black line between two white lines. The 
clypeus is much like that of carolinensis but lacks the white 
margin. It has a white spot in the middle, running from between 
the middle eyes to the falces, and an oblique chestnut-colored 
spot passing outward from under each of the middle eyes to the 
margin. Above these, below the lateral eyes, it is white. The 
abdomen is black, mottled wath gray, with a lighter basal band 
running on to the sides. There are two pairs of gray spots on 
tlie anterior part of the dorsum and a central gray spot further 
back. Xear the spinnerets are two snow-white dots. The legs 
have the coxae and trochanters yellow, contrasting strongly with 
the other joints, which are dark, with many white hairs. The 
front faces of the falces are thinly covered with white hairs. 
The under parts are light gray. 
We have several females from Georgia. 
Pellcnes simplex, n. 
PI. I, fig. 12. 
9. Length, 5.5 mm. Legs, 3412, first and second stoutest. 
The quadrangle of the eyes is slightly wider behind than in 
front, and is one-third wider than long. The front eyes are 
all separated and form a curved row, the middle being twice as 
large as the lateral. The maxillae are more than twice as long 
as the labium, and are wide, and slightly rounded. The clypeus 
is nearly as wide as the middle eyes. 
The cephalic plate is covered with short yellow hairs and a 
thin growth of long black hairs ; on the sides of the cephalothorax 
the hairs are white, and the lower margin has a black line between 
two white lines. The upper thoracic part, in our single speci- 
men, is rubbed bare. The abdomen has gray hairs around the 
base and sides, and in an irregular band down the middle, and 
a dark band on either side which becomes black where it forms 
the scalloped outline of the gray side bands. The legs and palpi 
are yellow, with white hairs. The clypeus and the spaces between 
the eyes are covered with yellowish-white hairs, and the reddish- 
brown falces have white hairs growing thinly over their front 
falces. 
We have one female from Vera Cruz, ^Mexico. 
