Peckham—Revision of the Aitidce of North America . 417 
straggling white hairs. The clypeus is covered with long white 
hairs. The upper parts of the falces are covered with white 
hairs, and the ends are green. The palpi are yellowish with 
white hairs. Above the femur of the first, at the distal end, is 
a ridge of black hairs, and below there is a dark plate, wider 
and shorter than in the male, surrounded by white scales, which 
run into long white hairs except at the outer or posterior side, 
where there is a bunch of dark hairs. This makes a long white 
fringe below, which covers the under surface, and there is a thin 
white fringe under the other joints. 
We have a pair sent by Mr. J. D. Johnson, from Claremont, 
Cal.; a female from San Diego, sent by Mr. Hanham, and a 
male from Mr. Cockerell, Las Cruces, 17. M. The ornamenta¬ 
tion of the male is most perfectly developed in the California 
specimen. 
Eemoratus is distinguished from Putnamii and coccineus by 
notes under those species. 
PHIDIPPUS PUTNAMII P. 1883. 
Plate XXXIII, figs. 3—3b. Plate XXXIV, figs. 3—3a. 
1883. Attus putnamii P., New or little known Attidse, p. 1. 
1885. Phidippus geacius K., Ver. z. b. Gesell., VI, p. 495. 
1888. Phidippus putnamii P., Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and Letters, 
VII, N. A. Att., p. 35. 
1901. Phidippus putnamii P., ibid., XIII, p. 286. 
$. Length 7-9 mm. Legs 1423, femur I crested and en¬ 
larged. 
All of our specimens are rubbed, and this seems to have been 
the case with the one described by Keyserling. The ground 
color of the cephalothorax and abdomen is sometimes reddish- 
brown, sometimes much darker, even black. There is a large 
white spot between the dorsal eyes and on each side of the head, 
from the second to the third row of eyes, is a white bar. Ridges 
of smoky-brown hairs are found above the first row of eyes and 
running obliquely forward from each dorsal eye toward the 
