422 Wisconsin Academy of Sciences , Arts and Letters. 
of white. The dark integument of the abdomen shows through 
a covering of short white, and longer yellow hairs. There is a 
white basal band, rather high up, and farther back on the sides 
are several short white diagonals. The dorsum has two pairs 
of spots on the front part and two pairs of oblique bars behind, 
all white. The venter is black with short yellowish hairs. The 
falces are dark and the legs are brown, the first pair with a 
thick yellowish-brown fringe to the end of the tibia. 
One male from Missouri. 
PHIDIPPUS CAROLINENSIS n. sp. 
Plate XXXII, figs. 6—6e. 
1901. Phidippus obscurus P. g $, Wis. Acad. Sciences, Arts and Let¬ 
ters, XIII, p. 294. 
Not togatus C. K., nor gracilis Keys., nor obscurus P. 1888. 
Length, 8 10 mm., $ 10-13 mm. Legs, 8 1423, $ 4132, 
first pair enlarged and fringed. 
The cephalothorax is bright reddish-brown covered with 
snowy white hairs, except for a band of reddish hairs between 
the eyes of the second row. In the female there are long black 
hairs around the eyes of the second row and in two bunches on 
the middle of the cephalic plate, while the male has a wide ridge 
of stout rusty-brown hairs which crosses above the front row of 
eyes and passes back on each side, within the second row, to the 
dorsal eye. The male has, also, on each cheek, behind the lat¬ 
eral eye, a long tuft of the same rusty-brown hairs, and these 
are connected by a fringe of shorter hairs of the same color 
which crosses below the front eyes, edges the clypeus, and hangs 
down over the falces. The falces are darkly iridescent in both 
sexes, the female having a band of white hairs across the 
upper part, while in the male the proximal ends are covered with 
white, rice-like scales which pass into a stiff fringe of long white 
hairs, cut squarely off at the ends. The abdomen is of a deli¬ 
cate gray, marked with white spots and bands outlined in black. 
