28 
ATT HUE OF THE UNITED STATES. 
1883 
anterior eyes are surrounded with red hairs; they are in a slightly 
curved row, a straight line from the top of the middle eyes, cutting 
the lateral eyes above the centre. The middle eyes are sub-touching, 
and are twice as large as the lateral eyes, which are more widely sepa- 
rated. The clypeus is one-fourth as wide as the middle eyes; it is 
vertical, and has red hairs just below the eyes, and long white hairs 
on its lower edge. 
The palpus has a simple bulb, which does not project backward 
over the tibia. 
The falces are vertical, and moderately long and stout. In color 
they are black, with a transverse fringe of long white hairs where 
they meet at the base. 
The maxillae and lip are blackish. The maxillae are wider at the 
extremity, and rounded. The lip is half as long as the maxillae, wide, 
and also rounded. 
The sternum is narrower in front than behind; it is black, with 
long white hairs. 
The relative length of the legs is 4, 1, 2, 3. The first pail- is a little 
the stoutest. In color they are black, or dark brown, with patches of 
white and tawny hair. There are spines on the tibial and metatarsal 
joints of the four pairs; and on the femoral joints of the second, third 
and fourth. The spines on the metatarsi of the fourth extend to 
the base. 
The abdomen is flattened. There is a central longitudinal band, 
black, and on either side of this a band of coarse gray hair. 
The venter is blackish in the central line, and white on the sides. 
Habitat, Florida. 
Observations. We have named this species for Mr. Chas. Mann, ol 
Milwaukee, Wis. 
XXII. Epiblemum palmarum, Hentz. 
(Plate III, Figures 22 to 22a.) 
MALE— Length, 5.5 mm.; width of abdomen, 1.1 mm.; length of ceph.th., 2.1 mm.; 
width of ceph.th., 1.8 mm. 
The cephalothorax is not high, the cephalic part being much 
the shorter. There is a deep depression between the cephalic and 
thoracic parts. The color is bronze brown with short golden down, 
lighter in the eye region. The lower narrow margin is black. A 
wide white band passes around the clypeus and the upper sides just 
below the eyes; just behind the dorsal eye, on each side, this band 
curves upward over the thoracic part, and ends near the base. The 
eyes are surrounded with bright red hair. 
The quadrangle of the eyes is wider than long, and not wider be- 
hind. The dorsal is as large as the lateral eye, and is on a line with 
